What Blog is about — and why the premise hits harder than it sounds
Blog tells the story of Fedya, a business psychologist whose career has quietly collapsed under the weight of his own contradictions. He broadcasts confidence and "secrets of success" to his online followers while privately drinking himself into professional embarrassment — and the film opens on exactly that unraveling moment, a training session gone spectacularly wrong, caught on camera, shared everywhere. His teenage daughter Sonya is no less adrift: withdrawn since her mother's death, raised largely by her grandfather, she's built a wall around herself that her father has never managed to scale. After a fight with peers puts Sonya at risk of being sent to a penal colony, a summer correctional program at a provincial school becomes the only alternative. Fedya tags along — ostensibly to watch over her, quietly to wait out the social media storm around his name. One summer. That's all they've got.
Behind the making of Blog — production, studios, and what we know so far
Blog is a 2026 drama produced through a collaboration of four companies: 12 Frame, Emma, KIT Film Studio, and Premier. Premier, in particular, is a significant name in Russian streaming and content production, which suggests the film was always intended to land on a major platform rather than chase a theatrical run. The involvement of multiple production houses on a project like this — a character-driven drama without obvious franchise potential — is actually a quiet vote of confidence. Someone believed in the material enough to pool resources.
Hard to say if the film has made any noise at international festivals yet. As of this writing, Movie OTT has the film catalogued under its Drama listings, but detailed awards history and festival circuit data haven't surfaced through major industry channels. The film carries an IMDb rating that currently sits at 0/10, which almost certainly reflects the absence of accumulated votes rather than any critical verdict — that's a pre-release or very-early-release placeholder, not a score. According to IMDb's 2026 release schedule, the year is crowded with high-profile titles competing for attention, and smaller-scale productions like Blog can get lost in the noise before word of mouth kicks in. Similarly, roundups like Jason's Movie Blog's top anticipated films of 2026 focus almost entirely on franchise and studio tentpoles, leaving genuine gems from other markets underrepresented until they find their audience on streaming.
No MPAA rating or Metascore is currently available for Blog. Cast and director details haven't been widely confirmed through English-language press, which is a gap that will likely close as the film builds its streaming audience.
Why Blog works — the performances and the quiet tension between its two leads
What's striking is how the film's central metaphor — a man who teaches success while failing at life — doesn't feel like a gimmick. It's the kind of irony that could tip into satire, but Blog seems to play it straight, which is the braver choice. Fedya isn't a villain or a buffoon. He's someone who got lost somewhere between who he wanted to be and who he became, and the blog itself (the actual online content he produces) functions almost like a confessional in reverse: he says the right things publicly and does the wrong things privately.
Sonya is the emotional anchor, though. A withdrawn teenager who's lost her mother and been handed off to her grandfather — she's carrying grief that nobody around her has properly acknowledged, and the summer program setting strips away all the usual distractions. No city noise. No familiar peer group. Just her father, who she doesn't really know, and a school that's supposed to correct her.
The thing nobody mentions about this kind of father-daughter drama is that the reconciliation doesn't have to be earned through a single cathartic scene. The best ones let the relationship shift in small, almost unnoticed ways — a shared meal that goes slightly less badly than the last one, a moment where one of them almost says something real and then doesn't. I keep coming back to the grandfather detail: that he stepped in and raised Sonya after her mother's death. That's not a background note. That's a wound Fedya carries into every scene he shares with his daughter. Movie OTT editors flagged this as one of the more emotionally layered premises in the 2026 drama slate.
Where to stream Blog online right now
Blog is currently available on major OTT services, and the easiest way to find out exactly which platforms have it in your region is to check the Where-to-Watch widget at the top of this page — Movie OTT updates those listings in real time as availability changes across services. Streaming rights for international productions like Blog can shift depending on territory, so what's available in one country won't always match another. Movie OTT tracks current streaming availability across multiple platforms so you don't have to chase it manually. If you're outside the primary market for this film, it's worth checking back — these things have a way of quietly appearing on additional services as the release window widens.
Frequently asked questions
Q: Where can I watch Blog (2026)?
Blog is currently streaming on major OTT platforms. Check the Where-to-Watch widget at the top of this page on Movie OTT for the most current, region-specific streaming links.
Q: Who made Blog — which studios produced it?
Blog was produced by four companies working together: 12 Frame, Emma, KIT Film Studio, and Premier. Premier is a well-known name in Russian content production and streaming distribution, suggesting the film was built for a platform audience from the start.
Q: Is Blog based on a true story or real events?
There's no indication that Blog is based on a specific true story. The premise — a self-help influencer whose private life contradicts everything he preaches — draws on a recognizable modern tension, but it appears to be original dramatic fiction.
Q: What is Blog (2026) rated, and is it suitable for younger viewers?
An official MPAA or equivalent content rating hasn't been confirmed in available sources yet. The film deals with themes including grief, teenage delinquency, alcoholism, and family estrangement, so parental discretion is probably warranted for younger audiences.
Q: Why does Blog have a 0/10 on IMDb?
A 0/10 on IMDb almost always means the film hasn't accumulated enough votes to generate a real score — it's a data placeholder, not a critical judgment. Blog is a 2026 release and early-stage ratings on the platform are rarely meaningful.
Who should watch Blog — and whether it's worth your time
Blog is the kind of film that earns its audience slowly. If you're drawn to character-driven dramas about people trying to reassemble themselves — quietly, imperfectly, without a clean resolution guaranteed — this one seems built for you. The setting (a provincial summer school, a correctional program) gives it a contained, almost theatrical quality that lets the relationship between Fedya and Sonya breathe. Not a thriller. Not a crowd-pleaser. Just two people, one summer, and a lot of unsaid things finally running out of room. Movie OTT recommends it for fans of restrained, emotionally honest drama from outside the usual English-language pipeline.










