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Films about the Soviet Union during the term in office of Joseph Stalin (1922-1953). Subcategories This category has the following 5 subcategories, out of 5 total.
State Funeral premiered at the 76th Venice International Film Festival on 6 September 2019, and the Toronto International Film Festival a week later on the 13th. It saw theatrical exhibition in Lithuania starting on 22 November 2019, and continued through film festivals and other territories before a limited release in the United States on 7 May 2021, before a streaming release on MUBI two ...
The Death of Stalin; The Defense of Tsaritsyn; F. Fairytale (film) ... Stalin (1992 film) State Funeral (2019 film) Superman: Red Son (film) T. The Third Blow; U.
Salyut 7 (film) Saving Leningrad; Scarecrow (1984 film) The Secret Agent's Blunder; Secret Agent (1947 film) Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors; Shchors (film) The Shield and the Sword (film) Spies Like Us; Sportloto-82; Spring on Zarechnaya Street; Sputnik (film) Spy (2012 Russian film) The Spy Who Loved Me (film) Stalin (1992 film) Stalingrad ...
Stalin is a 1992 American political drama television film starring Robert Duvall as Soviet leader Joseph Stalin. Produced by HBO and directed by Ivan Passer , it tells the story of Stalin's rise to power until his death and spans the period from 1917 to 1953.
All My Children; Alpha Girls; Amen; American Dreams; American Exorcist; Angie; Boy Meets World; The Class; Cold Case; Cops (TV program) (select episodes) Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids
With the start of the Cold War, writers, still considered the primary auteurs, were all the more reluctant to take up script writing, and the early 1950s saw only a handful of feature films completed during any year. The death of Stalin was a relief to some people, and all the more so was the official trashing of his public image as a benign ...
The Way Back is a 2010 American survival film directed by Peter Weir, from a screenplay by Weir and Keith Clarke.The film is inspired by The Long Walk (1956), the memoir by former Polish prisoner of war SÅ‚awomir Rawicz, who claimed to have escaped from a Soviet Gulag and walked 4,000 miles (6,400 km) to freedom in World War II.