Stand up for the facts!

Our only agenda is to publish the truth so you can be an informed participant in democracy.
We need your help.

More Info

I would like to contribute

$
Viral image
Viral image
stated on October 22, 2022 an Instagram post:

Video clips show staged war footage from Ukraine.

Pants on Fire!
By Ciara O'Rourke
October 26, 2022

Video clips mischaracterized as showing fake Ukraine war footage

If your time is short

  • Video clips show behind-the-scenes shots of a music video and a sci-fi movie, not staged war footage from Ukraine. 
 
See the sources for this fact-check

A recent Instagram post sharing a TikTok video issues a “wake up call,” purportedly pointing to several clips as evidence that scenes of war in Ukraine have been staged. 

One of the clips shows a man grabbing his head while on his knees. A narrator calls him a Ukrainian soldier “in agony” before saying, “and cut,” implying that the emotion has been faked for war propaganda.

As another clip shows people filming a crowd running toward them, the narrator says: “Here we go, this is my favorite. And action. Okay, you’re all running, you’re all scared…Run, you’re terrified, you’re terrified of incoming attacks from Russia.”

A man then appears on camera and eventually says: “You’re watching a f—— movie.” 

The Instagram post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)

Using reverse image searches and InVid, a site that helps identify the origins of video clips, we found the ones featured in the Instagram post, and neither is meant to show real footage of the war in Ukraine. 

RELATED VIDEO
 

The first, of the man grabbing his head, is behind-the-scenes footage of a music video for the song “Lullaby” by Ukrainian singer Anna Khanina. 

The second clip wasn’t even filmed in Ukraine, or this year. It’s behind-the-scenes footage of filming in Birmingham, England, of the 2019 sci-fi movie “Invasion Planet Earth.” Its director, Simon Cox, tweeted in March that he “was shocked” to see the footage being misused as misinformation about the war.

These aren’t the only clips being misused as war propaganda. We’ve previously debunked posts that said video games show actual Ukrainian victories in the war, and that footage from a short video by a German TV network shows a downed Russian aircraft in the invasion.  

Those claims were wrong, and so is this one. We rate the claim that these clips show fake war footage in Ukraine Pants on Fire.

Our Sources

Instagram post, Oct. 22, 2022

YouTube, Колыбельная, Колискова, Lullaby, Oct. 22, 2022

YouTube, Как снимался в музыкальном клипе певицы Anna Khanina, Oct. 14, 2022 

Invasion Planet Earth, visited Oct. 25, 2022

YouTube, Invasion Planet Earth BTS run for your life Birmingham, April 7, 2013

Simon Cox tweet, March 3, 2022

 

Browse the Truth-O-Meter

More by Ciara O'Rourke
Viral image
stated on April 2, 2025 a Facebook post:
“White hats to investigate Wisconsin Supreme Court election.”
False
Facebook posts
stated on March 28, 2025 a Facebook post:
Photo shows a missing police officer in “extreme danger.”
Pants on Fire!
Facebook posts
stated on March 28, 2025 a Facebook post:
Images show damage from an “earthquake in Thailand.”
False

Video clips mischaracterized as showing fake Ukraine war footage





Donald Trump
stated on May 4, 2026 a White House event:








Donald Trump
stated on April 23, 2026 remarks at the White House:







Chris Wright
stated on April 19, 2026 an interview on CNN's "State of the Union":