Oscar statuette for 'Mr. Nobody Against Putin' goes missing on flight

Published 01 May, 2026 02:25pm 2 min read
Pavel Talankin, winner of the Oscar for Best Documentary Feature Film for "Mr Nobody Against Putin", poses at the Governors Ball following the Oscars show at the 98th Academy Awards in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, US. -- Reuters
Pavel Talankin, winner of the Oscar for Best Documentary Feature Film for "Mr Nobody Against Putin", poses at the Governors Ball following the Oscars show at the 98th Academy Awards in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, US. -- Reuters

The Oscar statuette belonging to Pavel Talankin, the Russian director who won best documentary this year for ‘Mr. Nobody Against Putin’, has gone missing ​after he was forced to check the award into hold luggage ‌on a flight from New York to Germany, his co-director said.

Talankin was due to fly from John F. Kennedy International Airport to Frankfurt on German carrier Lufthansa. But Transportation ​Security Administration (TSA) agents told him that the 8.5 lb (3.8 kg) statuette ​posed a potential security threat, his co-director David Borenstein said on ⁠Thursday.

“At the airport, a TSA agent stopped him and said the Oscar ​could be used as a weapon,” Borenstein said on Instagram.

“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,” he said, posting a series of ​pictures, including of the box.

“It never arrived in Frankfurt.”

Responding to Borenstein’s Instagram ​post, Lufthansa said it was taking the matter seriously.

“We will do everything we can to ‌find ⁠the Oscar as fast as possible and have already escalated this,” it said.

Lufthansa did not immediately respond to a request for further comment on Friday, which is a public holiday in Germany.

Speaking to the online magazine Deadline.com after ​arriving in Germany on ​Thursday, Talankin said ⁠it was “completely baffling how they consider an Oscar a weapon.”

On previous flights on various airlines, he had flown with ​it “in the cabin, and there never was any kind ​of problem,” he ⁠told the outlet.

Talankin and Borenstein’s documentary used two years of footage that Talankin recorded at a school where he worked in Russia’s Chelyabinsk region to show how ⁠students ​were exposed to pro‑war messaging.

The 35-year-old Talankin, who ​fled Russia in 2024, has defended the film as a record for posterity to show how “an ​entire generation became angry and aggressive”.

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