Russian Director Pavel Talankin’s Missing Oscar Statuette Found in Frankfurt

Russian director Pavel Talankin's Oscar statuette for 'Mr Nobody Against Putin' was found in Frankfurt after going missing from a JFK-Frankfurt flight. The statuette was forced into checked luggage by a TSA agent who deemed it a potential weapon. Lufthansa confirmed the Oscar is safely in their care and is working to reunite it with Talankin. Producer David Borenstein questioned if a famous actor would have faced the same treatment.

Key Points: Missing Oscar of Russian Director Pavel Talankin Found

  • Oscar went missing after TSA forced it into checked luggage
  • Statuette was placed in a cardboard box and never arrived in Frankfurt
  • Lufthansa confirmed it found the Oscar and is working to return it
  • Producer David Borenstein questioned if a famous actor would have been treated the same way
  • Documentary won BAFTA and Oscar earlier this year
3 min read

Russian director Pavel Talankin's missing Oscar statuette for 'Mr Nobody Against Putin' found

Russian director Pavel Talankin's Oscar for 'Mr Nobody Against Putin' was found in Frankfurt after going missing from a JFK-Frankfurt flight.

"The Oscar statue has now been located and is safely in our care in Frankfurt - Lufthansa"

Washington DC, May 1

Russian director Pavel Talankin's Oscar statuette for documentary 'Mr Nobody Against Putin' has been found after it went missing from the flight which was bound from JFK airport in New York to Frankfurt, Germany, told the Lufthansa Airlines spokesperson, as reported by Variety.

According to the outlet, the Oscar went missing on Wednesday after Talankin, who co-directed the documentary with David Borenstein and is also the film's protagonist, was stopped from taking it on board a plane bound for Frankfurt, Germany, by a security official at New York's John F Kennedy airport.

The agent had argued that the statuette could be used as a weapon, and it would have to go in the hold. As Talankin didn't have a bag for the hold, the Oscar was put into a cardboard box. However, when he arrived in Germany, the Oscar was gone.

"The Oscar statue has now been located and is safely in our care in Frankfurt," Lufthansa told Variety, adding that the airline was in direct contact with Talanki to reunite him with his Oscar "as quickly as possible," as quoted by Variety.

"We sincerely regret the inconvenience caused and have apologised to the owner. The careful and secure handling of our guests' belongings is of the utmost importance to us. An internal review of the circumstances is ongoing," said Lufthansa as quoted by Variety.

On Thursday, producer Borenstein posted about the incident on Instagram.

"Yesterday [Talankin] arrived at JFK ready to fly home to Europe, carrying the Oscar as a carry-on. At the airport, a [Transportation Security Administration] agent stopped him and said the Oscar could be used as a weapon. She wouldn't let him carry it on board," wrote Borenstein

He explained that Robin Hessman, one of the film's executive producers, "got on the phone and tried to reason with the agent, but it didn't work."

He added, "Pavel didn't have a bag to check it in, so the TSA put the Oscar in a box and sent it to the bottom of the plane. It never arrived in Frankfurt."I've looked and I can't find a single other case of someone being forced to check an Oscar. Would Pavel have been treated the same way if he were a famous actor? Or a fluent English speaker?"

Earlier this year, 'Mr Nobody Against Putin' emerged victorious at the BAFTA and Oscars. The documentary revolved around a Russian teacher who secretly documents his small town school's transformation into a war recruitment centre during the Ukraine invasion, revealing the ethical dilemmas educators face amid propaganda and militarisation.

The lead actor in the film, Pavel Talankin, who recorded the footage during the war, also attended the award ceremony. While accepting the award, director David Borenstein credited Pavel for showing courage in telling his story during one of the toughest times of his life.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

A
Arjun K
What a bizarre and chaotic travel experience! 😂 First they say no carry-on, then they put it in a cardboard box? That's not how you treat a valuable award. Lufthansa better handle this with more care. Also, kudos to the film's message—India should take note of how propaganda works in authoritarian regimes.
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Sarah B
This is embarrassing for American security. An Oscar is literally a symbol of artistic achievement, not a weapon. The fact he had to check it in a *cardboard box* is ridiculous. I'm glad it's been found, but the TSA needs to reevaluate their policies. Art shouldn't be treated like contraband.
V
Vikram M
I find it interesting that the film exposes Russia's propaganda machine, yet the West's own bureaucracy created this farce. 🙏 Anyway, the real hero is the teacher who risked his life to document the truth. The Oscar is just a trophy; the story behind it matters more.
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Nisha Z
Really hope Lufthansa compensates him properly. This kind of treatment is unacceptable for any passenger. The TSA agent's logic is baffling—if an Oscar can be a weapon, then what's next? Banning books because you could hit someone with them? 🤦‍♀️ Glad it's found at last.

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