Category:Soviet films - Factbites
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Topic: Category:Soviet films


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In the News (Sun 27 Dec 09)

  
 Dictionary of Meaning www.mauspfeil.net
* Captain Kloss category:Russian films category:Soviet films category:Fictional secret agents and spies pl:Stirlitz
www.mauspfeil.net /Stirlitz.html

  
 FIPRESCI - Festival Reports - Sochi 2003
'Seventh Bullet' (Ali Khamraev / 1972), 'Red Poppies of Issyk-Kul' (Bolotbek Shamsiev / 1971), 'In Search of the Wind' (Vladimir Lyubomudrov / 1978), 'The Sixth' (Samvel Gasparov 1981) and 'At Home Among Strangers' (Nikita Mikhalkov / 1974) were some of the films in this category.
The Soviet films, on the other hand, mostly refer to the period of the Civil War or the period immediately after the Civil War.
The thematic element of the stretching of the ‘frontier’, central to the Hollywood western is thus retained but transformed to include the encounter of socialism with feudal and ‘backward’ social elements and formations.
www.fipresci.org /festivals/archive/2003/sochi_2003/sochi2003_rdoraiswamy.htm

  
 Enemy at the Gates by James Horner
The story of Enemy at the Gates revolves around a love triangle set in the Soviet Union during World War II.
James Horner is known for taking themes which he introduces as secondary motifs in earlier films and later employing that theme, extending it and varying it to become the back bone of another film's score.
Horner states that he wanted to create a "big Hollywood score for this movie;" however, Enemy at the Gates contains so many elements from past scores, which were fairly large "Hollywood" types, that most would not group it in a "non-Hollywood" category.
www.tracksounds.com /reviews/enemygates.htm   (956 words)

  
 Category talk:Russian films - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
And Potemkin is shot by Mosfilm, i.e., it is a Russian one (and a soviet as well).
It took me a while to understand, and perhaps part of the problem is that the distinctions between the different categories are not very clear.
And I don't buy this idiotic accusation in "nationalism": culture is a national trait, not a political one.
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/Category_talk:Russian_films   (1179 words)

  
 October Sky
October Sky is a typical example of such a film, which basically seemed to fall into the "blink and it's gone category", which is enormously unjustified, as unlike many films that disappear without trace at the box office, this thoroughly deserved far more recognition at the box office than it seemed to receive.
Hickam, Jr, this is the true story of the inspiration that the Soviet launch of Sputnik in October, 1957 gave to Homer, the son of a coal miner in the typically small coal mining town of Coalwood, West Virginia.
October Sky is a wonderful film, presented on essentially a damn good DVD.
www.michaeldvd.com.au /Reviews/OctoberSky.asp   (2095 words)

  
 Category:Russian films - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This category is for films created by film studios of Russia and cast in Russian language.
See also Russian language films and Soviet films categories.
For more information, see the article about Cinema of Russia.
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/Category:Russian_films   (89 words)

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