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Films about the Russian Revolution (1917). Russia portal; Film portal; Subcategories. This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total. S.
It is a celebratory dramatization of the 1917 October Revolution commissioned for the tenth anniversary of the event. Originally released in the Soviet Union as October , the film was re-edited and released internationally as Ten Days That Shook The World , after John Reed 's popular 1919 book on the Revolution.
Russian empire Yolki 1914: Ёлки 1914 2014 1914 Admiral: Адмиралъ 2008 1914–1917, 1964 World War I, Russian Revolution, Russian Civil War: Aleksandr Kolchak: Matilda: Матильда 2017 1890–1896 Matilda Kshesinskaya and Nicholas II Wild League: Дикая Лига 2019 1909 Raspoutine: Распутин 2011 1916 Grigori Rasputin
Russian Empire films 1908–1917: Cinema of the Soviet Union; ... Movies from Imperial Russia online at Russian Film Hub; Russian film at the Internet Movie Database
A list of the most notable films produced in the Cinema of Russia. Russia, since beginning to produce films in the late 1890s, has experienced three political regimes; the Russian Empire, Pre-1917; the Soviet Union, 1917–1991; and the Russian Federation, 1991–present. Films ordered by year and decade of release are split for political purposes.
Kino was the first Russian periodical devoted to the cinema. Ladislas Starevich made the first Russian animated film (and the first stop motion puppet film with a story) in 1910 - Lucanus Cervus. He continued making animated films (some of which can now be bought on DVD) until his emigration to France following the 1917 October Revolution. He ...
The Russian Revolution brought more change, with a number of films with anti-Tsarist themes. The last significant film of the era, made in 1917, was Father Sergius by Yakov Protazanov and Alexandre Volkoff. It would become the first new film release of the Soviet era.
The Masses was thereby forced by the United States federal government to cease publication during the autumn of 1917 after the staff refused to change the magazine's policy against World War I. The Liberator, a magazine founded by Max Eastman and controlled by him and his sister, published Reed's Russian Revolution accounts instead. In an ...