Mr Labet remembers when, for 18 months of his first presidency, Donald Trump hit European wine with a 25% import tariff during a dispute over airlines.
It's not known when or where the videos were filmed, although snow visible beside the road in one suggests it could have been weeks or months ago.In another video, posted on a Russian Telegram channel on Sunday, a police officer was seen entering the back of one of the containers in the wake of the attack.
Seconds later, the container exploded, suggesting it may have been booby-trapped.How to assess the impact of such a spectacular operation?"From a military point of view, this is a turning point in the war," aviation expert Anatolii Khrapchynskyi told me.
"Because we have dealt a significant blow to Russia's image and the capabilities of the Russian Federation."A little over three months after Donald Trump berated Volodymyr Zelensky, telling him he had "no cards," Ukraine has offered an emphatic riposte.
"Ukraine has shown the whole world that Russia is actually weak and cannot defend itself internally," Khrapchynskyi said.
But that doesn't mean that Russia is about to change course.Since then, the building has undergone a £2m refurbishment that has seen a complete internal refit to the public areas and screens, and "substantial" repairs to the roof and stonework.
The venue will boast a total capacity of 350 seats and the former three-screen cinema will now offer a fourth, seating 24, for private screenings.A-listers from the film world got behind the campaign to save the well-loved cinema, including patrons Jack Lowden and Charlotte Wells and supporters Dougray Scott, Brian Cox, and Emma Thompson.
When the cinema opens, it will show a programme of films missed during the venue's almost three year closure.Lowden, whose film credits include Dunkirk and the upcoming Tornado, said the reopened cinema would provide a lift to Scotland's film-makers and storytellers.