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Shirli-myrli (Russian: Ширли-мырли, also released as What a Mess!) is a 1995 farce comedy film of the early post-soviet era directed by Vladimir Menshov. [1] Centered around a pursued con man, who stole a huge diamond, the movie, among other things, satirizes chauvinism, antisemitism and other ethnic tensions in the 1990s Russia.
Russia, 2003. As the film scholar Josephine Woll observes, the protagonist Veronika was instrumental in shaping the post-Stalinist Soviet movies by heralding more complicated multi-dimensional celluloid heroines and focusing on the impact of war on common people. It was not only Soviet audiences that accepted and sympathised with Veronika's story.
The 1960s and 1970s saw the creation of many films, many of which molded Soviet and post-Soviet culture. They include: Five Days, Five Nights (1960), the first of the joint Soviet-German films; Walking the Streets of Moscow (1963) Operation Y and Shurik's Other Adventures (1965) and its sequel, Kidnapping, Caucasian Style (1966)
Pages in category "Films about the Soviet Union in the Stalin era" The following 63 pages are in this category, out of 63 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Download QR code; Print/export ... Films about the Soviet Union in the Stalin era (5 C, 63 P) V. ... Man with a Movie Camera; Man Without a Name (1932 film) ...
Russian historian Boris Sokolov wrote that the film's depiction of Battle of Kursk was "completely false" and the German casualties were exaggerated. [52] Liberation presents the civilian population in Berlin welcoming the Red Army; German author Jörg von Mettke wrote the scene in which the German women flirt with the soldiers "might have ...
Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; ... Soviet films online at Russian Film Hub This page was last edited on 30 July 2023, at 16:15 (UTC). ...
Starik Khottabych (Russian: Старик Хоттабыч, Old Man Khottabych or Old Khottabych) is a Sovcolor Soviet fantasy film produced in the USSR by Goskino at Kinostudyia Lenfilm (Lenfilm Studio) in 1956, based on a children's book of the same name by Lazar Lagin who also wrote the film's script, and directed by Gennadi Kazansky.