Home / Arts and Entertainment / Indie Docuseries Wins Top Award, Primed for Oscar Nod
Indie Docuseries Wins Top Award, Primed for Oscar Nod
12 Nov, 2025
Summary
- Julia Loktev's "My Undesirable Friends: Part I - Last Air in Moscow" wins 2025 IFSN Advocate Award
- Film captures independent journalists facing threats from Putin's regime in Russia
- Qualifies for Oscar consideration this year

In a significant achievement, the epic docuseries "My Undesirable Friends: Part I - Last Air in Moscow" by Soviet-born American filmmaker Julia Loktev has won the 2025 Indie Film Site Network (IFSN) Advocate Award. The IFSN awards, created to highlight independent films that illuminate humanitarian issues, come with a substantial prize of one million media impressions across the Indie Film Site Network.
Loktev's film, which has a runtime of 5 hours and 24 minutes, has now qualified for Oscar consideration this year. The documentary provides an extraordinary historic record of Russia on the verge of fascism, offering an immersive and intimate inside view of the opposition in an authoritarian society. Loktev traveled to Moscow in 2021, just four months before Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, to capture the stories of independent journalists, including her friend Anna Nemzer, a talk show host at TV Rain, Russia's last remaining independent news channel.




