Artem Ryzhykov (b. 1989, Bila Tserkva) is a Ukrainian filmmaker and cinematographer. His work on the Sundance Grand Jury Prize-winning The Russian Woodpecker (2015) received the International Documentary Association Award for Best Cinematography. A graduate of Kyiv National University of Theatre, Cinema and Television, he trained under Vadim Vereshchak and Bogdan Verzhbitsky. His latest film, A Simple Soldier (2025), marks his feature debut as co-director.
A Simple Soldier
A Simple Soldier
A Simple Soldier
Filmed over three and a half years on Ukraine’s frontline, the film follows a young filmmaker who trades his camera for a rifle and joins the Territorial Defence Forces. As war reshapes his life, he moves from storyteller to soldier, documenting fear, loss and resilience amid chaos.
Artem Ryzhykov: ‘I never intended to make a film about myself. When the war began, I picked up a camera for the same reason I always had: to observe, to understand, to bear witness. But once I joined the Territorial Defence Forces, the distance between filmmaker and subject disappeared; there was no safe place to stand.
I became a soldier not because I was brave, but because I was afraid of doing nothing. The camera stayed with me not as a tool of control, but as a way to remain human inside an inhuman reality. Filming became an act of survival — proof that I was still capable of seeing, feeling and remembering.
A Simple Soldier is not about war as spectacle. It is about how war enters a life, reshapes it and leaves behind something fragile, painful and profoundly human.’

Juan Camilo Cruz is an Emmy- and BAFTA-winning Colombian-German producer and director. His credits include In Her Hands (2022) and collaborations with Matthew Heineman. As director, he made Venezuela: Country of Lost Children (2023). His latest film, A Simple Soldier (2025), co-directed with Artem Ryzhykov, premiered at Sheffield DocFest. He is a member of the Directors Guild of America.

