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SummaryIn the chaos of post-Soviet Russia, rising KGB officer Vladimir Putin (Jude Law) joins forces with master manipulator Vadim Baranov (Paul Dano) to reshape life behind the Iron Curtain, using violence and deception to change the world forever. Putin and Baranov’s reign of chaos begins with lies and corruption, and quickly escalates to assassinatio... Read More
Directed By:Olivier Assayas
Written By:Giuliano Da Empoli, Olivier Assayas, Emmanuel Carrère
The Wizard of the Kremlin
Metascore
Mixed or Average
56
User score
Mixed or Average
5.1
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Metascore
Mixed or Average
56
32% Positive
11 Reviews
11 Reviews
59% Mixed
20 Reviews
20 Reviews
9% Negative
3 Reviews
3 Reviews
Sep 1, 2025
100
I found its thundering journey through several decades of recent Russian and world history revealing and (perhaps more importantly) enormously entertaining. And by utilizing Law’s charisma to approximate Putin’s anti-charisma, it gives us a villain who is chilling and believable. I can’t wait to see it again.
May 14, 2026
78
Even among all the fictions, audiences will find more truths about modern Russia than they’ll get from most news broadcasts.
Apr 28, 2026
60
It’s smart and watchable in a miniseries sort of way, and sets the current war in Ukraine in an instructive wider context – while Dano is ideally cast as the unreadable vizier serenely pulling strings behind the scenes. But it’s also overlong.
Sep 1, 2025
60
The Wizard of the Kremlin is a loud, bold film that is held together by the quiet performance at its center.
May 15, 2026
50
The problem, though, from its clichéd interview framing (Jeffrey Wright plays an American journalist visiting the retired Baranov at his estate) to the tediously narrated flashback structure, is that the movie never lives and breathes inside its stitched-together moments, preferring to be a relentless, country-hopping talkfest in which characters opine as if fully aware of the consequential era they’re in, fully ready to explain it.
Sep 7, 2025
40
For a story that should be brimming with intrigue, danger, and the horrors of inventing your own reality, The Wizard of the Kremlin is instead a bloated, tiring recitation of facts that doesn't know how to elevate its dark subject matter.
May 15, 2026
30
Considering the gravity of the subject, and its immense potential, “The Wizard of the Kremlin” is not just a letdown, but something more like an insult. The film will do less damage to Mr. Putin’s reputation than to those of Mr. Assayas, Mr. Law and Mr. Dano.
User score
Mixed or Average
5.1
30% Positive
3 Ratings
3 Ratings
40% Mixed
4 Ratings
4 Ratings
30% Negative
3 Ratings
3 Ratings
May 15, 2026
10
Jude Law plays an amazingly realistic Vladimir Putin. His aide, the main character, shows us how power is exercised in modern Russia, outmaneuvering oligarchs and confusing the West. A thinking person’s movie, for sure.
May 15, 2026
6
Political leaders often don’t rise to that level of power without the strategic scripting concocted for them by the little-known kingmakers behind them. And that’s what this fact-based, though satirically fictional, political thriller about the rise of Russian president Vladimir Putin (Jude Law) seeks to chronicle. The film tells the story of professional political fixer Vadim Baranov (Paul Dano), who rises from art school student to television producer to “the Czar’s” righthand man, doing whatever it takes to promote and ensure the power of his boss after the resignation of President Boris Yeltsin (George Sogis) in 1999. Baranov is portrayed here as a soft-spoken schemer who doesn’t hesitate to play both sides of the fence to add to the unbridled clout of the Russian strongman, even if that means pitting social and political opponents against one another if that tactic results in increased backing for Putin’s policies and practices. What’s more, Baranov is so seduced by the prospect of amassing power and influence for himself that he even agrees to support causes that he himself disagrees with. For example, if need be, he’ll willingly back right-wing extremist positions regardless of whether those views clash with the “radical” democratic ideologies he once so whole-heartedly championed during the early days of the New Russia in the early 1990s after the collapse of the Soviet Union. But that brand of shameless cynicism carries a high price when it comes to aiding a political figure – a former KGB operative – to help him restore the allegedly respectable “integrity” of the Russian Empire. Baranov’s questionable odyssey is largely revealed through voiceovers by the protagonist and an American journalist (Jeffrey Wright) conducting background research about the 30-year era in question. His dubious exploits come to life through his various unsavory dealings with political leaders, oligarchs and social movements within Russia and surrounding areas like Ukraine and the would-be breakaway republic of Chechnya, most of which, unfortunately, are given short shrift and little more than Cleft Notes treatment. That may allow the pacing to move along surprisingly briskly, but it provides inconsequential depth and opportunities for little more than smarmy quotes by the protagonist in dialogues with clueless cohorts. There’s also a largely needless romantic story thread involving Baranov’s significant other (Alicia Vikander) that could have easily been cut, a move that would have allowed more time to be devoted to the re-creations of the watershed historical events depicted here. And, despite the strength of Law’s fine but underdeveloped performance, the remainder of the cast leaves much to be desired. Writer-director Olivier Assayas’s latest is arguably one of his most commercial works, but, like so many of his other films, it’s another disappointment, even if it’s easier to follow than many of his prior overly cryptic productions. However, that kind of accessibility still doesn’t make for a great picture, especially one whose subject matter deserves better treatment than it receives here.
Production Company:
- Curiosa Films
- Gaumont
- France 2 Cinéma
- Tribune Pictures
- LB Entertainment
- Jeff Rice Films
- Canal+
- France Télévisions
- Disney+
- Centre national du cinéma et de l'image animée (CNC)
Release Date:May 15, 2026
Duration:2 h 32 m
Rating:R
Awards
Venice Film Festival
• 1 Nomination
San Sebastián International Film Festival
• 1 Nomination




























