Based on the novel of the same name by Giuliano da Empoli, Assayas’s film casts Jude Law as Vladimir Putin and Paul Dano as embittered political strategist Vadim Baranov, a barely disguised version of Vladislav Surkov, who, as Putin’s deputy chief of staff during the first decade of his presidency, dominated Kremlin politics from behind the scenes before gradually falling from favour and eventually being expelled from the corridors of power in 2020.
The film spares no effort reminding us where it takes place — the ubiquitous snow crunches, the ubiquitous vodka flows, and no woman’s outfit is complete without a fur hat, however half-heartedly such touches are applied. Indeed, The Wizard of the Kremlin is a workplace drama with the aesthetics of a TV movie, where oligarchs, officials and FSB officers sip tea from expensive porcelain while casually deciding the fate of Mother Russia.