![Seda: People of the Marsh poster](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fimage.tmdb.org%2Ft%2Fp%2Fw600_and_h900_bestv2%2FyMe6OtpWorUsrAIRW177M23RFEM.jpg&w=1200&q=75)
Released
Seda: People of the Marsh
September 25 2004 (over 20 years ago)Rating
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- Director: Kaspars Goba
- Genre: Documentary
- Runtime: 52 m
- Country: Latvia
- Companies: Filmtank, VFS Films
In Seda, a remote peat miners' town in Latvia, time seems to be frozen in the Soviet era. Built in 1952 and inhabited by a multi-ethnic workforce from different parts of the former USSR, it still preserves intact the inflated style of a Stalinist "shock work" construction project. Culturally Seda's people feel like a community apart. Their lingua franca is Russian, and their social life is a mixture of Soviet and Russian Orthodox traditions. They don't want the European Union, they want to live in their own state - the Marshland.