A Beginner's Guide to Soviet Sci-Fi Cinema

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  • Опубликовано: 4 фев 2025

Комментарии • 601

  • @kubricklynch
    @kubricklynch  Год назад +28

    If you'd like to support the channel you can check out my Patreon:
    www.patreon.com/EvanChester
    or donate here: Venmo @Evan-Chester
    Or www.paypal.me/EvanChester

    • @noheroespublishing1907
      @noheroespublishing1907 Год назад +1

      One question, did the Soviet Union get to watch the Star Wars films? I honestly don't know, what were they're opinions if they did?

    • @АлексейМихалёв-н7д
      @АлексейМихалёв-н7д Год назад

      Could you highlight the mystery of what Glenn Stanton may have to do with the animated film "The Mystery of the Third Planet"? I see that he is mentioned as a director on some sites, including imdb, but in my opinion this is just some kind of mistake. Imho, this is nonsense.

    • @kubricklynch
      @kubricklynch  Год назад

      Yes upon further investigation, I agree that is just some sort of error on IMDB.

    • @eugenenuribekov1231
      @eugenenuribekov1231 7 месяцев назад

      @@noheroespublishing1907 yes, but in the late 80's, before collapse.

    • @AliksStuff
      @AliksStuff 2 месяца назад

      I actually laughed out loud when I saw "Ivan the Terrible Switches Professions"
      That was one of my favorite childhood movies.

  • @DinoCism
    @DinoCism Год назад +699

    Kin-Dza-Dza is one of the most underrated films I know of.

    • @rhubarbpie8709
      @rhubarbpie8709 Год назад +31

      Yes, my favourite movie of all time

    • @MarvinNoFun
      @MarvinNoFun Год назад +22

      I think a TV series Lexx took a lot of influence from Kin Dza Dza

    • @TheAntsh
      @TheAntsh Год назад +22

      ​@@jasc4364 it means you are too young to understand and properly evaluate it. Rewatch it in 20 or 30 years anf you'll consider it a masterpiece.

    • @jejethejeplalq821
      @jejethejeplalq821 Год назад +10

      I clicked on the video just to see if it was mentioned.

    • @Neuronauticus
      @Neuronauticus Год назад +10

      There is a newer animated feature film, by the same director Geogry Danelia, Ku! Kin-Dza-Dza (2012). Seems he wasn't able to achieve everything he wanted technically in 1986 and remade it as an animation

  • @mrkvsky8681
    @mrkvsky8681 Год назад +799

    As russian i really appreciate your soviet movie essays and guides. "Иван Васильевич меняет профессию" is also still one of the most popular soviet comedy, it's on air every new year's holiday.

    • @ApXucBuH
      @ApXucBuH Год назад +50

      And it's not just "Ivan Vasilievich". Literally, it is "Ivan Vasilievich changes profession"

    • @ApXucBuH
      @ApXucBuH Год назад +2

      @memgen-憂鬱頭 well, I'd say more of us coming to Israel, hehehe

    • @ApXucBuH
      @ApXucBuH Год назад +1

      @memgen-憂鬱頭 it already has my sister, so thanks

    • @BadWebDiver
      @BadWebDiver Год назад +20

      As an Australian, I've long been been fascinated by Russian and Soviet cinema. I saw Amphibian Man years ago on late night television, and have been trying to trace it ever since. I've also really enjoyed Ivan's Childhood, Battleship Potemkin and Cossacks and Cowboys as well.

    • @imyarek
      @imyarek Год назад +2

      @memgen. As a Russian who's never been to Argentina I think other Russians come to you not because of some specific attractions (although I'm pretty sure there are some) but to look at a country that is one of the most far away from Russia and that has a culture that is generally very disconnected to Russia.

  • @brainblessed5814
    @brainblessed5814 Год назад +282

    'Mystery of th third planet' is based on Kir Bulychev's series of sci-fi novels about adventures of Alisa Selezneva, a teenager from the 23 century. These series of books were adopted into a TV mini-series 'Guest from the future' and live action movie 'Liliac ball' and some other lesser known adaptations. Its odd that you left those out as TV series was very popular.

    • @kubricklynch
      @kubricklynch  Год назад +17

      It’s not odd because this video is about cinema, not TV.

    • @brainblessed5814
      @brainblessed5814 Год назад +33

      @@kubricklynch 'Liliac ball' was a proper movie its just main protagonist was played by the same actress as in TV series so it was kind of like a coninuation to it and I thought I had to mention it. For kid's sci-fi films it was basically either 'Liliac ball' or 'Moscow -Cassiopea'/''Teen in the universe' diology. Rough times.

    • @mEDIUMGap
      @mEDIUMGap Год назад +6

      21st century she was of

    • @alexandertvaladze8226
      @alexandertvaladze8226 6 месяцев назад

      @@brainblessed5814 While it's true that 'Liliac ball' is a proper movie I would rather reguard it as fantasy than sci-fi)))

  • @tonyg25
    @tonyg25 Год назад +437

    Man, soviet scifi makes me so nostalgic for a future that never happened.

    • @Vasily_dont_be_silly
      @Vasily_dont_be_silly Год назад +35

      It makes a lot of people feel that...

    • @TinLeadHammer
      @TinLeadHammer Год назад

      This is because many sci-fi movies followed the principles of "socialist realism". Socialist realism is not how socialism actually looks - it is dreadful - but how socialism should look. A more appropriate name would be "social idealism". The rosy-colored theory imagined well-educated people having equal rights, working creative jobs, creating a paradise on Earth and conquering other planets, helping their inhabitants to fight off their oppressors. What is not to like? Too bad it was a pipe dream.

    • @EbefrenRevo
      @EbefrenRevo Год назад

      Like ruZZia, no future.

    • @sarafisioannis2097
      @sarafisioannis2097 Год назад +26

      at least they tried. They screwed up in the end but they tried. Till Next time

    • @mYnAME-ww9iv
      @mYnAME-ww9iv Год назад +8

      ​@@sarafisioannis2097Till next time indeed. Next attempt is gonna be the last for sure.
      "The future is my home..."

  • @Kreozot2D
    @Kreozot2D Год назад +109

    Kin-Dza-Dza! is a movie my father watched in a movie theater when he was young. The premiere was very popular with young adults as I understand, and father told me that it was really funny that people were walking on the streets shouting "KOO!" at each other and those who haven't seen the movie yet were freaked out :D Me and people of my age still use the word to greet each other in text messengers, and for my father this word still is the word to start the converstation with.

    • @dimas3829
      @dimas3829 Год назад +24

      what colour of pants does he wears, though?

    • @ХомаЛенивый
      @ХомаЛенивый 7 месяцев назад +8

      А я вот впервые увидел Кин-Дза-Дза по ТВ в детстве. Это был культурный шок потому что в фильме происходило сплошное безумие. Только спустя годы я понял в чём смысл фильма. Это ПостАпокалипсис в стиле дизельпанк. Инопланетяне владеюь космическими перелётами, телепортацией, дизентеграцией, телепатией но совершенно потеряли культуру. Визгливые звуки скрипки им кажутся шедевром.

    • @losarpettystrakos7687
      @losarpettystrakos7687 6 месяцев назад +1

      I've been using "Koo" as a greeting word among family and friends till today! 🙂 And if someone is in bad mood, I say: "Mr. P.G. ordered to put on muzzles and rejoice!".

    • @JackieBlade1
      @JackieBlade1 4 месяца назад

      t should be noted that Kuu's phrase had a new effect during Covid times. It was often joked about at work. The distance was maintained, the greeting pose was recognizable.

  • @shinigamisougiya1576
    @shinigamisougiya1576 Год назад +35

    Im happy to see Amphibian Man mentioned because it is one of my favorite films and it's a shame not many know about it.

    • @uglaegilsdottir
      @uglaegilsdottir 2 дня назад

      It is my mom's favorite movie; I watched it in the movie-theater as a kid, together with my cousin Maxim! 🌹

  • @jumping_toad
    @jumping_toad 7 месяцев назад +25

    I was born in the early 2000s, but Soviet films are a huge part of my cultural code. I still love these films so much, they have a special atmosphere... Thanks for your interest in our culture! Great video-essay!

  • @Threetails
    @Threetails 4 месяца назад +3

    Ivan Vasiliev Changes Occupations is really worth a watch! My husband and I loved it!

  • @Professor_Vince
    @Professor_Vince Год назад +128

    Teens in The Universe gave me the creeps as a kid. They really nailed the hi-ranking robot's design with that androginous and uncanny-chill-Hellraiser-look and the whole psychological hooror of hijaking the limbic system and losing one's indentity is actually deeper then Star Track's borg.

    • @Vasily_dont_be_silly
      @Vasily_dont_be_silly Год назад

      Same. I kinda like the film now, but when i was a kid those robots were number one image in my nightmares😅

    • @1984potionlover
      @1984potionlover 10 месяцев назад

      It's "Star Trek", Professor🤨🖖

    • @ХомаЛенивый
      @ХомаЛенивый 7 месяцев назад +4

      Сцена где девочки попадают в лабораторию где их собираются сделать "счастливыми" самая жуткая.

  • @brainblessed5814
    @brainblessed5814 Год назад +142

    'Death ray' looks to be based on Alexey ( not Leo) Tolstoy's novel 'The hyperboloid of engineer Harin' which was adapted into movies two more times in 60s - 70s. Tolostoy was also the author of 'Aelita' and of famous childrens book 'Buratino', a reimagening of 'Pinoccio'.

    • @SlapstickGenius23
      @SlapstickGenius23 Год назад

      I think Leo and Alexei Tolstoy were distantly related. Both belonged to Russian nobility.

    • @dadandadandan
      @dadandadandan Год назад +12

      ​@@SlapstickGenius23 they are fourth cousins once removed, as far as I know.

    • @violencer1
      @violencer1 Год назад +2

      No, it's not actually. It came two years before The hyperboloid was completed

    • @TheHalflingLad
      @TheHalflingLad 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@violencer1 Oh wow, you're actually right: the novel wasn't out until 1927. I also assumed Tolstoy's book came first.

  • @jakemeyer8188
    @jakemeyer8188 Год назад +22

    I'm absolutely obsessed with Tarkovsky. "Stalker" is absolutely mesmerizing...

  • @kfeltenberger
    @kfeltenberger Год назад +56

    I really got interested in Soviet cinema and fiction back in 1993 when I took "History of Communism" in college. They called it that for internal political reasons and to ensure Federal grant money, but essentially it was a class on Russian/Soviet/Russian history from the mid 1800s to the present. One of the things the professor did was make us watch several movies of the early Soviet era, mostly by Eisenstein and read the Soviet science fiction book, "Red Star". While the political themes were different than what I was used to, it was an interesting look into beliefs that weren't mine or what I was raised with, and what they saw as an "ideal". Overall, it gave me a better idea of the mindset and thought processes of the Soviets of the era...so I guess Thrawn was right that you can learn a lot about a culture by looking at their art.

    • @cb9825
      @cb9825 7 месяцев назад +4

      Your professor had an interesting choice of literature. "Red star" is not exactly widely known in Russia. I guess it's for the people who have read everything popular in that genre and want to read some more.

    • @_Diana_S
      @_Diana_S 6 месяцев назад

      @@cb9825 I would say, "Red Star" is (almost) unknown to the Soviet people ).

  • @BeoZard
    @BeoZard Год назад +27

    In college I did a project on Eastern European Sci-Fi movies of the 50's and 60's and I have seen 11 of the films you have mentioned. I am glad to see others have an appreciation for these films.

  • @olgaga7va511
    @olgaga7va511 6 месяцев назад +5

    Thank you for mentioning «Cherez ternii k zvezdam». I love this movie for its strong ecological message and incredibly beautiful actress Elena Metyolkina -she looks and acts like a real alien.

  • @Ergilion
    @Ergilion Год назад +22

    Some commentators already mentioned the TV series "Guest From The Future" with the same character Alisa Seleznyeva as in the Mystery Of The Third Planet animation.
    Although it is a TV series it is definitely worth checking out. It has I believe 6 episodes and greatly resembles a modern japanese anime shows in form. The plot features high school teenagers and the main protagonist is their peer Alisa from the future. The story revolves around time travel and a piece of technology from the future that allows mind reading. It has evil shapeshifting aliens, flying robot cars and humanoid robots. The soundtrack for the series is a masterpiece and has become absolutely iconic. It is used in a classic leitmotif way throughout the show in different arrangements to reinforce emotion. Today this music "Прекрасное далёко" is often used to project nostalgia. This TV show enjoyed immense popularity and the girl who played the leading role has become a sex symbol of a whole generation of soviet school children. She got endless bags of mail from all over USSR after the show aired. These guys are probably around 45-50 now.

  • @mentalitydesignvideo
    @mentalitydesignvideo 7 месяцев назад +6

    The Andromeda Nebula (Tumannost' Andromedy) is like that because is was supposed to be a two-parter (based closely on the novel by Ivan Yefremov). Sadly, the older actor who plays the starship's captain died before they could shoot the second part and they had to release the footage as a stand-alone film. Also, they light-damaged the answer negative, I think, because every release is purple and has a typical light-leak halo on the left edge of the frame.
    It's a visual masterpiece that far surpasses anything done in the West up to that moment, I venture to say. You might not've noticed, but they even foresaw the laptop form factor. The outfits are as much Greco-Roman as Constructivist/Suprematist - Yefremov was a huge fan of Hellenic antiquity and the early Soviet visionary zeal.

  • @vasme-ju1hk
    @vasme-ju1hk Год назад +13

    Ok but ivan vasilyavich changes occupation is probably one the funniest movies in history😂

    • @EvaCher3465
      @EvaCher3465 Месяц назад +1

      Its a tradition for me to see this movie on December 31 :)))

  • @georgeoldsterd8994
    @georgeoldsterd8994 Год назад +159

    "The Andromeda Nebula" was based on the novel of the same name by Ivan Yefremov, a prominent Soviet writer of historic fiction and sci-fi (among other things). "Nebula" is actually one of his several works set in his Grand Ring universe, others being "The Bull's Hour" and (partially) "The Heart of the Serpent". The "Nebula"'s adaptation saw some issues, with several alterations being made because of the political climate in the USSR at the time (mostly a few scenes were removed, and later were restored). That said, it was indeed shoddily filmed. "The Bull's Hour" was also meant to be adapted into film, but it never happened.
    "Mystery of the Third Planet" is also an adaptation, this time of Kir Bulychev's children's sci-fi novel "Alisa's travel". Bulychev had a whole series dedicated to Alisa, several of his works being adapted to cartoon or film. Another example being "Guest from the future" (1985), a television mini-series aimed at children and teens about Alisa traveling to our present (1980's at the time) in order to retrieve a powerful mind-reading device that some space pirates (the generic baddies of the series) stole from her, and that was stolen from them by a boy from the 1980's. Another adaptation was a feature film called "Lilac ball" (1988), where space pirates were using the eponymous lilac ball - a bio-weapon containing a hate virus - to take over planets and rob them of their precious resources. Since the pirates lacked the manpower to actually take the planets by force, they would send a scout ship to deploy a lilac ball. The pirates would eventually reach the planet themselves, set off the device, which released the virus and made everything on the planet hostile to each-other, and would finish off whatever's left of the inhabitants, taking over the planet unhindered. Alisa has to stop the pirates' ship from reaching Earth, where a lilac ball had already been placed back in the mythical past. While it might sound grim, it's actually a children's film featuring fairy-tale characters (mythical past, remember?), so don't expect anything overtly dark like "Per Aspera ad Astra" or "Dead man's letters".
    There were also several sci-fi films about robots, such as "The rainbow formula" (1966) about a scientist who secretly creates an android twin of himself in order to pursue his research of rainbows without the interference of his colleagues and bosses. The android escapes with a device that also allows it to change its appearance at will, and the scientist now has to find him. "His name was Robert" (1967), a sci-fi comedy about a scientist creating an android for future space exploration and gives it his own appearance. As an experiment he sends the android on a date with an employee, but the android falls in love with her and eventually runs off. This results in a wild goose-chase with people mistaking the scientist for his android twin on several occasions. Eventually the android breaks down because it is too difficult to be human. "The Adventures of Electronic" (1979), a tv mini-series about an android - Electronic - who was made to look like a boy from a magazine photo. Electronic escapes the lab and somehow comes across the boy - Zhenya - that his appearance was based on. The two become friends and Zhenya gets Electronic to go to school in his place and do other things that he doesn't like (i.e. chores) but Electronic becomes so good at these things and so well-liked by everyone around that Zhenya becomes afraid that Electronic will replace him in everything else. Since it's a children's tv-series, it's likewise fairly lighthearted.
    Speaking of the "Amphibious man", there was another underwater sci-fi film called "The Aquanauts", about an underwater research station.
    There was also the film called "This merry planet" (1973), a New Year-themed sci-fi comedy about a team of highly-rational, pedantic aliens visiting Earth on New Year's Eve, finding themselves at a New Year's costume party where everyone thinks they're just in costume and character. Since they're highly rational and pedantic, they don't understand the point of celebrating New Year, so as one can expect, by the end of the film they understand the point and become happier for it. It's a pretty bad film, to be honest, and it's also somewhat sexist. Just figured I'd give it an honourable mention.
    Another thing to mention is that during the Stalinist period and later as well there was the so called "Close goal science fiction" (rough translation) which was about scientific developments that are technically possible to achieve in the near(est) future, so it's kind of like hard sci-fi, but through the prism of Marxism-Leninism, and less "fi". It was primarily a literary genre and not very interesting for cinema, which is also the reason why there weren't a lot of cinematic works (there were some anthologies that came close, I think).

    • @stevejordan7275
      @stevejordan7275 Год назад +5

      *Very* informative; thank you, George!
      You could have your own channel, since it seems there's plenty of ignorance to speak to, and lots of subject matter yet to cover.

    • @SlapstickGenius23
      @SlapstickGenius23 Год назад +4

      The Adventures of Electronica is definitely based on a beloved children’s book.

    • @boqndimitrov8693
      @boqndimitrov8693 Год назад

      gosh, how many childhood memories came back as i was reading!..thank you for that.

    • @Anuta6675
      @Anuta6675 Год назад +4

      Absolutely loved The Adventures of Electronic. Every child's dream, to have a double to do all the burdensome chores 😀

    • @Roadman3D
      @Roadman3D Год назад

      Thank you for sharing and for such an insight!

  • @giovannimazzari2343
    @giovannimazzari2343 Год назад +94

    I'm a 19 year old Italian boy who just found out about your channel as I wanted to explore more the infinite world of cinema and your videos are beautiful examples of deep and wide cinema knowledge and history and I wanted to thank you very much for your continuous work in discussing about cinema culture/history. I was also very curious to know how you started learning about the world of cinema and what has lead you to create the channel. Thank you.

    • @kubricklynch
      @kubricklynch  Год назад +16

      So I would say the first thing that really made me interested in film history was the special features on the Reservoir Dogs DVD I had as a teen that talked about all the movies that were referenced. And really special features in general on DVDs opened my eyes to world of filmmaking.
      And then I went to college and studied film. I wrote several essays in school, and figured, why not turn them into youtube videos?
      Glad you enjoy the channel!

    • @user-xz4all
      @user-xz4all Год назад +2

      Perhaps you should watch Soviet fairy tale films (and cartoons) based on the tales of Gianni Rodari.

  • @toodamnnemu
    @toodamnnemu Год назад +53

    Hey, just wanted to drop a comment to say that your video was awesome! As a sci-fi fan, I loved learning about the history and culture of Soviet sci-fi and your explanations were super clear and interesting.

  • @Laurabeck329
    @Laurabeck329 Год назад +65

    Can we just appreciate how incredibly cool all of these space suits look? They have a completely different feel to western scinece fiction and they just feel more realistic than a lot of american films of the era

    • @Robb1977
      @Robb1977 Год назад +13

      My guess would be western producers were looking for the most futuristic and cost effective thing... so mylar suits dominated hollywood. While in the soviet union they went for cheap and aircraft related... so alot of flight harnesses and leather jackets.

    • @greggeverman5578
      @greggeverman5578 Год назад +1

      ​@@Robb1977point

    • @OCTO358
      @OCTO358 Год назад

      @@Robb1977 so they both were looking for something cheap, gotcha.

    • @swampdonkey3958
      @swampdonkey3958 Год назад +1

      @@greggeverman5578 his point seem to be explaining a hypothesis about this? typically that is point people explaining things, but what point in you asking what is his point?

  • @antonlavrentiev5249
    @antonlavrentiev5249 Год назад +37

    Tarkovskiy is much more loved abroad, then in Russia itself. Because foreign viewers are mostly critics or movie lovers, who are told that they are going to watch the talented movie of a talented Soviet director. Soviet viewers were ordinary people, who came to movie theater, some after work or study, some on a weekend with family, to watch a sci-fi movie. But instead they were given a very strange and unnecessary long arthouse project.

    • @travkin8842
      @travkin8842 6 месяцев назад

      Тарковский живодёр,который сжигал и калечил животных заживо ради,, удачного'' кадра. И относится к нему нужно как к последней мрази.

  • @MaximumBan
    @MaximumBan Год назад +54

    As someone been born in USSR in 1980, and influenced by grandfather who was a true patriot of his country, I inherited true love for Soviet Space ... what can I call it, genre?
    Some of the animation movies you showed flashbacked me to my childhood way back to 1987. Made me fill very nostalgic about these childhood years that long been passed away.
    Thank you for that.🙏

  • @danial5387
    @danial5387 Год назад +14

    Solaris sticks with me to this day, 20 years after I watched it for the first time. Some of the scenes in it are terrifying even now.

  • @noheroespublishing1907
    @noheroespublishing1907 Год назад +167

    It always blows my mind when people claim that the USSR didn't create innovative and wonderful culture.

    • @dunnowy123
      @dunnowy123 Год назад +42

      I remember historian (and unapologetic Western chauvinist) Niall Ferguson writing about the Soviets, and how they degraded Russia to such an extent, that they were in a cultural dead zone for 75 years and never recovered. It's not that the West deliberately ignored Soviet cultural achievements, of course not.

    • @MouseTai1
      @MouseTai1 Год назад +13

      Because it wasnt the USSR who created that culture, it was people who lived there. And more often than not they expressed their creativity against the zeitgeist of the soviet society and cultural environment.

    • @noheroespublishing1907
      @noheroespublishing1907 Год назад +2

      @@dunnowy123 That is a revolting way of looking at that time period.

    • @noheroespublishing1907
      @noheroespublishing1907 Год назад +42

      @@MouseTai1 Using this logic every society would fall under this; it has no explanatory value.

    • @AW00047
      @AW00047 6 месяцев назад

      People claim that because it's extremely hard to make something creative and innovative under oppressive censorship of a rigid communist state.
      So MouseTai is right, it was not created _by USSR_ , but more often _in spite of USSR_

  • @mixererunio1757
    @mixererunio1757 Год назад +87

    Not only Tarkovsky didn't like Solaris, Stanisław Lem didn't like it either. But to be fair he was even more critical of the American adaptation

    • @ColtraneTaylor
      @ColtraneTaylor Год назад +1

      I didn't either. That's why I skipped it and went for other Soviet movies like Battle Beyond the Sun.

    • @TrueFork
      @TrueFork Год назад +11

      I thought it was good as a film but not good as an adaptation, and the American one looked mostly like a bad remake of Tarkovsky's adaptation rather than a new adaptation. Is it documented somewhere what Lem didn't like about it? I can guess, but it would be interesting to know his own thoughts.

    • @Choo-choo-chookcha
      @Choo-choo-chookcha Год назад +18

      @@TrueFork From an article released before Lem's death, it was revealed that Lem had an arguement with Tarkovsky after the first screening of the film. The argument ended with Lem calling Tarkovsky a fool and leaving with a promise never to speak with him again. Later Lem explained that he wrote a book about failure of communication and Tarkovsky took it and made a movie that tells there's no place like home. I've read the book and watched the movie and get what he meant. You feel like the movie follows the idea of the book until the final 30 seconds when it's not. As for the Hollywood take on Solaris - Lem simply laughed at it. Having the book and Tarkovsky's film as predecessors, it sucks ass completely.

    • @TrueFork
      @TrueFork Год назад

      @@Choo-choo-chookcha thanks. That makes sense.

    • @peterpfenninger8990
      @peterpfenninger8990 Год назад +2

      I do think, Lem was a writer, never really thought of making a film out of his story. People who tried to make a film `bout the strange planet, acting as a cosmic Sigmund Freud, had a serius problem. I had the privilege to first read the book, then seeing first the cccp version and much later the usa one. both of the film had no chance against my deduced phantasies, when I read the book ( In translation)

  • @Wallyworld30
    @Wallyworld30 6 месяцев назад +4

    10:00 AMPHIBIAN MAN IS A MASTERPIECE! James Bond stole the idea of having a house of a massive exotic Lair. It's free to watch on RUclips in HD. I've heard was basically the Soviets "Wizard of Oz" as every one of it's citizens had seen it multiple times. I promise you it's the best movie you've never heard of.

  • @jnyfmg
    @jnyfmg Год назад +15

    I like the way you talk about these; it seems like a lot of the time when people talk about anything from the soviet union, they speak with a sort of distaste or disrespect, instead of appreciating the art that went into it. Lots of good films here, and an interesting history with the space race :-)

    • @AndKalashnikov
      @AndKalashnikov 6 месяцев назад +2

      Призрак гуляет по планете. Призрак маккартизма😆

  • @_Diana_S
    @_Diana_S 6 месяцев назад +5

    As for "Moscow-Cassiopeia" and its sequel "Youth in the Universe", they, just like another popular movie "Big Space Travel" "Большое космическое путешествие" (1975), were made for 7-13 yo audience, so no wonder it had teenage drama featuring prominently. These were considered children movies, not really serious sci-fi ones.

  • @krymz1
    @krymz1 Год назад +8

    I love this idea of half documentary and then half imagination. both educational and entertaining at the same time.

  • @seanbeadles7421
    @seanbeadles7421 Год назад +19

    I love Soviet sci fi! I even took a class called “comparing eastern and western science fiction” in college lmao

  • @elenagamora448
    @elenagamora448 Год назад +13

    The Land of Sannikov (1973) was one of my favourite films when I was a teenager

    • @AndKalashnikov
      @AndKalashnikov 6 месяцев назад

      Ну это не сай фай

  • @K.A.Joseph
    @K.A.Joseph Год назад +4

    this channel is a treasure for every seventh art lover. keep it up brother 🖤🖤

    • @Johnnysmithy24
      @Johnnysmithy24 Год назад

      I agree! It was insanely helpful to me when I started getting seriously into Cinema
      I never saw an Arthouse or Foreign film before I found his channel

    • @K.A.Joseph
      @K.A.Joseph Год назад +1

      @@Johnnysmithy24 An absolute truth my friend.

  • @_Diana_S
    @_Diana_S Год назад +10

    Thanks for the video! You have uncovered and presented many films that are not known even to sci-fi fans in the later USSR. FYI: "Aelita" is pronounced with clear "Ah" in the beginning, 4-syllable, flowing name.

  • @LeiaThePrincess1
    @LeiaThePrincess1 Год назад +7

    The film "Ivan Vasilyevich Changes His Profession" (full name of the movie) is very loved, as it has many jokes and satires on the topic of real life.

  • @CopperKettle
    @CopperKettle Год назад +8

    Yes, the cartoon Contract (1985) was great, I so loved watching it as a kid - sadly, it was not aired on TV often. I lived in Siberia, was born in 1978.

  • @Onibabayaga
    @Onibabayaga Год назад +3

    I am absolutely fascinated and enamored with Stalker. It mesmerizes me every time and my imagination runs wild. I love it.

  • @Robb1977
    @Robb1977 Год назад +10

    I love how ad-reading is the eastern equivalent of leader/party-praising in western media.
    Apparently it was a major culture shock for soviet citizens to have movies on tv broken up by advertising breaks.

  • @volkilyamih
    @volkilyamih 6 месяцев назад +4

    Amphibian Man is actually based on Aleksandr Belyaev's book. Really cool book.

  • @DelmiraVesna
    @DelmiraVesna Год назад +62

    Shocked to know about DAR VETER, a clear inspiration behind Darth Vader. Lucas was a secret Comrade! 😹 Also "Hard to Be A God"- the aesthetics and premise gave me The Witcher vibes! Since Witcher was written in the 90s, i think it definitely got inspiration from this novel & movie!

    • @Vasily_dont_be_silly
      @Vasily_dont_be_silly Год назад +19

      Hard to be a God had a huge hyper-realistic arthouse remake in 2013 by director Alexei German. It's very arthouse and way too naturalistic (I couldn't watch it because of that), but I have to admit there's insane attention to detail in the film. You might want to check it out.

    • @Beowulf_93
      @Beowulf_93 Год назад +1

      People stil dont understand what the empire is 😂

    • @OCTO358
      @OCTO358 Год назад +5

      @@Beowulf_93 "people don't agree with my interpretation" is not the same as "people don't understand what it is".

    • @verafaith5961
      @verafaith5961 Год назад

      @@Vasily_dont_be_silly I talked to a man who worked as a pyrotechnician on the set of this film, he said that everything that was shown there, IN FACT, was natural. If the screen showed shit, then in fact it was shit 😵

    • @theosumper227
      @theosumper227 Год назад +4

      @@OCTO358 George Lucas, the creator of Sta Wars himself said that the Empire represents USA and the Rebels Vietnam, but you know, that's just Lucas' "interpretation".

  • @homiefromgrovestreet4588
    @homiefromgrovestreet4588 Год назад +15

    Great video as always. You could make a video on Kalatozov's work someday, his work is really underrated

    • @kubricklynch
      @kubricklynch  Год назад

      He was definitely a great director.

    • @homiefromgrovestreet4588
      @homiefromgrovestreet4588 Год назад +1

      @@kubricklynch Yeah, some shots from The Cranes are Flying and Soy Cuba are still astonishing to this day

  • @_Diana_S
    @_Diana_S 6 месяцев назад +2

    Another Soviet sci-fi movie worth mentioning was "Moonlight rainbow", "Лунная Радуга". Made in 1983 after the novel of Sergey Pavlov, included two parts of his trilogy. Very visually dark movie (must be a low budget), popular actors, haunting electronic music. When i saw it i just wished someone would re-shoot it or remade completely, leaving the soundtrack on.

    • @AndreyZosimov
      @AndreyZosimov 5 месяцев назад

      It book (I mean original story) is really impressive. I think at our days this story is interesting as story about special people. They were different but they loved humanity.

    • @alsm974
      @alsm974 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@AndreyZosimovAgree. Genius book (3 part series) of the very talented author.

  • @NickAndriadze
    @NickAndriadze 11 месяцев назад +5

    I still never fail to be amazed by the sheer bizarreness and surrealism of most of the Soviet filmographic content, ESPECIALLY the animation and science fiction movies. They're so weird, crude and nonsensical most of the times, yet absolutely gorgeous and artistic at the same time. Truly, a one of a kind genre that will never be able to be captured *EVER* again.

  • @kairate6899
    @kairate6899 2 месяца назад +1

    Amphibian man is absolute legend among the soviet sci-fi

  • @TimBarrett-b2u
    @TimBarrett-b2u 3 месяца назад

    Solaris and Stalker are two of my all time favorites. But I had no idea there was a whole genre of Soviet Sci-fi. This gives me plenty of films to dive into.

  • @ledumkletsplayzzz
    @ledumkletsplayzzz Год назад +6

    This is so sad that you didnt mentioned Visitor from the Future.
    But anyway - video is great, as a kid i was growing up with such films back in the days.
    Thank you a lot for covering it for western audience.
    Peace!

    • @kubricklynch
      @kubricklynch  Год назад +1

      I only excluded it because its a TV thing. Thanks for watching!

    • @AndKalashnikov
      @AndKalashnikov 6 месяцев назад

      Ну он слишком малобюджетный и плохие спецэффекты

  • @GinisisDroid
    @GinisisDroid 12 дней назад

    Stalker is such a great movie, there is nothing like it

  • @MarvinNoFun
    @MarvinNoFun Год назад +9

    Would be great to make a video about post Soviet sci fi. There were some very peculiar examples of that in the 90s and in the 21st century

  • @kevinmoore8780
    @kevinmoore8780 Год назад +3

    Thank you. I learned a lot. A great follow-up would be the flood of Russian sci-fi in the last 10-15 years (Darkest Hour, Invasion, The Guardians, Sputnik, etc.) . Some of it very good. Some less so.

    • @AndKalashnikov
      @AndKalashnikov 6 месяцев назад +1

      За последние 10-15 лет ничего достойного нет. Не представляю как вам могли понравиться перечисленные фильмы😱

  • @mediavictim77
    @mediavictim77 Год назад +1

    Thanks for highlighting these very cool films

  • @rafail3
    @rafail3 Год назад +2

    Thanks for the video. The movies you mentioned were the Soviet mainstream (even Tarkovsky). There were lots of Soviet movies with kind of sci-fi plots, that remain completely unknown in the West because the plots/events/jokes would need quite a lot of explaining. Anyway, one of those movies is The Thirty-third (directed by Danelia, the then-future director of above mentioned Kin-dza-dza). It is about a guy who works as a process engineer at a soft drinks'' factory. Once his teeth started to ache. A young dentist found out that the guy has thirty-three teeth instead of usual thirty-two. The guy was taken first to the capital of his region, then to Moscow, where he was told that he descends from Martians, so he is launched to Mars. There are so many hidden jokes about the USSR there and its current situation.

    • @kubricklynch
      @kubricklynch  Год назад

      I’ve been watching some of that director for an upcoming video on comedies, but I think that one I couldn’t find english subtitles for.

    • @rafail3
      @rafail3 Год назад

      @@kubricklynch Exactly. I tried to translate some excerpts into English, the translated jokes were of dim sort and not funny. I mean you can translate it, the translation will be true to the original, not literal, not word for word. But not a funny one either. You need to know the setup of jokes.

  • @migmit
    @migmit Год назад +8

    I feel like "Abduction of a Wizard" from 1989 deserves a mention. It's a time travel story, with a couple of researchers from future establish a temporary base in a modern-day village, with the goal of going further into the past, where they want to save a scientist - who was assumed by his contemporaries to be a wizard - from his death from enemy's attack.

  • @expatamerican3234
    @expatamerican3234 Год назад +1

    Thanks for helping learn fast what might be worth watching.

  • @Johnnysmithy24
    @Johnnysmithy24 Год назад +1

    Other cool ideas are Beginner’s Guide to Classic American Westerns(since you already did Italian Westerns)
    And maybe also Italian horror, the French New Wave etc
    Love your videos

    • @kubricklynch
      @kubricklynch  Год назад +2

      Thank you for the kind words and the suggestions!

  • @damislav
    @damislav Год назад +1

    stalker atmosphere is just amazing cannot explain why

  • @awattleseed9155
    @awattleseed9155 Год назад +2

    Great video! I would love to see you do a vid on Soviet Fantasy and to see more fantasy on your channel in general

    • @kubricklynch
      @kubricklynch  Год назад +3

      Soviet comedy is next, but I will consider doing a video on Soviet fantasy as well!

    • @awattleseed9155
      @awattleseed9155 Год назад

      @@kubricklynch yay!

    • @Magemaster55
      @Magemaster55 Год назад

      Yes. I'd love to see that too. A lot of soviet era fantasy films were a children's TV films based on slavic folklore/fairy tales.

  • @TheAntsh
    @TheAntsh Год назад +6

    I remember watching Вельд (The Veldt) in 1987. It is based on several Ray Bradbury's short stories. It was eerie as hell, the closest to horror cinema USSR never had.

    • @Dvorkin82
      @Dvorkin82 12 дней назад

      It scared me a lot when i was a kid

  • @sunsunsunh
    @sunsunsunh Год назад +5

    Your videos are so much fun to watch. Could you do a video on Chinese cinema?

  • @NormanFinkelstein9863
    @NormanFinkelstein9863 Год назад +2

    I Think everyone appreciates what you're doing. And you're doing it well. Promoting an extraordinary wealth of history, art and perspective "largely ignored by the west', and I think that's what creates some of the mysterious awe about it.
    Don't be afraid to go into depth with things that you find captivating, it only lends more fascination in the detail and experience of viewer. . I could listen all day
    Thank you. again A Wealth..

  • @wd1530
    @wd1530 8 месяцев назад +2

    Очень познавательно, даже для того кто там живет. Спасибо.

  • @Kolajer
    @Kolajer Год назад

    Per aspera ad astra had the segments on the surface of the alien planet filmed using special film used for infrared spectrum photography, which gives those scenes a unique texture. The weightlessness scenes were filmed underwater and look extremely realistic.

  • @Eruidraith
    @Eruidraith Год назад +3

    Americans having to read ads in space is genuinely a great dig

  • @hija4lw709
    @hija4lw709 Год назад +4

    Thanks for the great video ❣️My movie list is much longer now😇‼️

  • @mrsoprano3848
    @mrsoprano3848 Год назад +9

    Dead Man's Letter is a very good film. Watch it if you haven’t. Also there are some really good greek scifi too and Polish also

    • @kubricklynch
      @kubricklynch  Год назад

      I think the only Polish sci fi I’ve seen is On the Silver Globe. Any recommendations?

    • @mrsoprano3848
      @mrsoprano3848 Год назад

      @@kubricklynch Right now I can think of two movies. The Hourglass Sanatorium by Wojciech Has although this is considered as the greatest surrealist film of alltime. And the other film I'd suggest would be Sexmission by Juliusz Machulski this is a great scifi comedy.

    • @zr6935
      @zr6935 Год назад

      @@kubricklynch ​ I'd point out three films of Piotr Szulkin: (i) Wojna światów - następne stulecie (1981), (ii) O-Bi, O-Ba. Koniec cywilizacji and (iii) Ga, Ga. Chwała bohaterom.
      Bizzare, surreal and fascinating... cannot recommend them enough.

    • @marakolenstein
      @marakolenstein Год назад +1

      Dead Man's Letters, absolutely! The scariest post-apocalyptic film ever.

    • @marcinos303
      @marcinos303 Год назад

      @@kubricklynch
      Short Films:
      "Poprzez piąty wymiar" - "Through the Fifth Dimension"(1973)
      "Przekładaniec" - "Layer Cake" directed Andrzej Wajda(1968)
      "Profesor Zazul" - "Professor Zazul"(1967)
      "Przyjaciel" - "Friend"
      Full-length films:
      "Milcząca Gwiazda"("Der Schweigende Stern") - "Silent Star"(1959) Polish-German blockbuster directed by Kurt Maetzig.
      "Sygnały MMXX" - "Signals: A Space Adventure"(1970) - Another Polish-German(DDR) production. Direction Gottfried Kolditz.
      "Test Pilota Pirxa" - "Pilot Pirx's Inquest"(1979) - Polish-Soviet production.
      "Golem"(1980) - directed Piotr Szulkin.
      For kids:
      "Akademia Pana Kleksa"- "Mister Blot's Academy"(1984)
      "Podróze Pana Kleksa" - "Travels of Mr. Blot's"(1986)
      "Pan Kleks w Kosmosie" - "Mr. Blot's in the Universe"(1989)
      "Tryumf Pana Kleksa" - "Mr. Blot's Triumph"(2001) - Live-action and animated film.

  • @mentalitydesignvideo
    @mentalitydesignvideo 7 месяцев назад +3

    Kontrakt was based on a short story by Robert Sheckley (who was hugely popular in the USSR and died there on his trip to meet the fans).

  • @MuradBeybalaev
    @MuradBeybalaev Год назад

    Russian here. And while I don't watch lots of movies…
    Кин дза дза holds a special place in my heart.
    Sought out all of the cinema adaptations of Солярис and was left unsatisfied with all of them in comparison to the book, including the Soviet one.
    Just watched Будет ласковый дождь, being curious of the description you gave it. Could be better but it's strong enough for a short with that closing shot. Made me wanna read Bradbury's short story someday.

  • @andressepter1984
    @andressepter1984 7 месяцев назад +1

    "Pereval" is based on Kim Bulyshevs mini-novella of the same name. Book is much more deep and focuses more about third generation who already forgets it's origins and becoming more and more natives of the planet. Crashed spaceship becoming more and more fairy tale of grandparents.
    "Vosvrashenye" aslo based on Kir Bulyshev's short story.

  • @jejethejeplalq821
    @jejethejeplalq821 Год назад

    Very good channel for people who appreciate foreign (non-Hollywood) cinema.

  • @Anuta6675
    @Anuta6675 Год назад +1

    "Ivan Vasiljevich" is one of my absolute favourites. So funny :-)

  • @erikziak1249
    @erikziak1249 Год назад

    5:00 RUR on the chest of the Robot stands for Rossumovi Universální Roboti, a sci-fi by czech author Karel Čapek, written in 1921. Karel Čapek is the creator of the word "Robot", but he used it more in the sense of what we call now Android - a humanoid robot, with human looks and body proportions. It was really nice that the Soviet Movie Loss of Sensation made a reference to his work, even though it is based on a different novel.

  • @fearlessjoebanzai
    @fearlessjoebanzai Год назад

    15:20 - I'm watching on a mobile phone, but this is possibly (of this kind), the tightest practical effect I have ever seen!

  • @piotrmalewski8178
    @piotrmalewski8178 7 месяцев назад +2

    For those who don't know this story: 'Inquest of Pilot Pirx' is very interesting, because it's basically a decades early movie version of 'The Impostor', where characters find new ways to establish who is the android but they don't get any definitive proof untill Pirx realises that the android is far superior to any human in every single way imaginable, so he has to create a situation where human weakness will show, while the android will still make best possible actions.
    And then, although he succeeds, the movie suggests that he might have destroyed one android and saved the crew, but at the end of the day everything could have been staged by A.I.
    While it doesn't look great on the movie, with time the most haunting thing is the scene when an android announces through the recording that any idea most absurd will be accepted by humanity as their own, only if promoted the right way, and he is going to put humanity into inescapable prison with their own hands.

  • @joangordoneieio
    @joangordoneieio Год назад

    TY so much! Ive always loved Russian SciFi; Books Stories Animation Movies. Been looking for a guide!

  • @platonmakinen8280
    @platonmakinen8280 Год назад

    Budet laskovy dozhd is one of the best animation media I've ever seen. Despite being so short, it leaves you with so much to ponder that you will not be able to move on from it for the next few days. Also, sadly, very relatable today.

  • @paulwilson8061
    @paulwilson8061 Год назад +2

    10:02- tarantino watched this movie in his childhood and he loved it.

  • @AdverDoiren
    @AdverDoiren Год назад +15

    There also was 1984 movie called Professor Dowell's Testament. It's based on 1925 book Professor Dowell's Head. The plot revolves around Professor Dowell's invention of a solution that can reanimate dead bodies, which is used to reanimate Dowell's head after his death. Can't say how good it is, since I watched it as a kid, but at the time I liked it.

  • @lyylski
    @lyylski Год назад +2

    Great video. I have already seen about half of these. The Dead Mountaineer's Hotel is probably my favorite of the lot. At times it felt like if David Lynch was actually Estonian and decided to make a weird whodunit. I haven't watched your animation video yet and I guess it was technically Russia, but AMBA is an insane animated short.

  • @Becka_Harper
    @Becka_Harper Год назад

    THANK YOU! I’ve been looking for “pisma myortvogo cheloveka” literally for over a decade. I saw it while recovering from a terrible infection and could never remember the name.

  • @CaptainReynolds-flyinspace
    @CaptainReynolds-flyinspace 7 месяцев назад +1

    In Kin-dza-dza, one of the main characters played by same actor who did voice over of soviet winnie the Pooh)

  • @RadCommieGamer
    @RadCommieGamer Год назад +147

    Being a native Russian and a fan of Sci-Fi I am breathless as to how many of Soviet Sci-Fi films went totally past me unnoticed. Thank you very much for your work.

  • @teeshoom
    @teeshoom Год назад

    Great research! Thank you so much for your work. Some of mentioned movies meen a lot to me. Some of them is a true art.

  • @terrylandess6072
    @terrylandess6072 Год назад +2

    I enjoyed both Nightwatch and Daywatch so they opened up my willingness to see more from the east.

  • @realartyomsneedov
    @realartyomsneedov 7 месяцев назад +1

    19:26 this movie is related to Kir Bulychev(russian author) universe, where main character is a teen Aliss Seleznyova
    there is a popular movie about it too

  • @BaldPerspective
    @BaldPerspective Год назад

    Super cool video. Soviet cinema is super interesting to me since I wasn't alive at the time as well as knowing how closed-off the Soviet Union was from the western world.

  • @RoseaNebulaLaeta
    @RoseaNebulaLaeta Год назад +1

    12:40 I wonder if this was an inspiration for the 80s anime "Gunbuster!" which also had a lot of emphasis on the interpersonal relationships between the teen characters and the emotional fallout of time dilation.

  • @frost8077
    @frost8077 Год назад

    I've only seen three Soviet sci-fi movies, but after Stalker and Kin-Dza-Dza, I'm certainly ready for more. Planeta Bur reminds me of Metroid, so I'll watch that one next.

  • @Conserpov
    @Conserpov Год назад +2

    Bradbury's "Here There Be Tygers" was also animated in 1989.
    Pretty much all good Western sci-fi are also anti-Capitalist - Robocop, Alien, Bladerunner, Total Recall etc.

  • @akaking7499
    @akaking7499 Год назад +35

    My grandfather played in original Hard to be a God (baron) and Amphebian man remake, Georgian Actor Elguja Burduli.
    Kin-dza-dza was also directed by Giorgi danelia and the violinist boy is also Georgian.
    And there was a popular Georgian animated series about a robot in a spaceship named Khelmarjve Ostati (master crafter)
    That's just some off the top of my head

    • @toomaskotkas4467
      @toomaskotkas4467 Год назад +3

      How many Sci-Fi movies have you made since 1991?
      I thought so. All your "achievements" are because of the USSR, not you.

    • @akaking7499
      @akaking7499 Год назад +1

      @Toomas Kotkas
      more! There's a running sci-fi show on TV right now.
      Georgia of 4 million had a film industry almost equal to Mosfilm, statistically overwhelming amount of actors, directors, poets, musicians, politicians... even to this day in post soviet space are ethnic Georgians.
      Only downside we had is that because of the iron curtain our stars couldn't become world wide sensations, but we'll get there soon enough.
      We even had a flim industry before reds invaded and made revolutionary cinema, but most were destroyed and directors killed because It didn't fit the soviet narrative (including my great grandfather)
      Unfortunately, due to economic hardships created by Russia, our film industry is a bit stagnated, but me and my generation are fighting to revitalise it.

    • @toomaskotkas4467
      @toomaskotkas4467 Год назад

      @@akaking7499 I never heard about anything coming out from Georgia in the past 30 years. Your cable village TV doesn't count if it's not international. You no longer live behind the "iron curtain", yet you've failed miserably to land anything of a value in the past 30 years. That proves that you've got nothing to offer.
      The same for your "pre-red" history. There is zero evidence that you've had anything and what you've been saying you had. I bet it's one of those "we dug up Black Sea..." folk stories.
      Your complain about "Russian sanctions" is just pathetic. There is no military blockade against you, you cam move in and out without problems. As for the Russian money that you've sucked on for a long time to support yourself, find another source.
      I do agree there are a lot of Georgians in Russia. What I think needs to happen is to strip them off their Russian citizenship and send them back to the motherland where they can produce "art" as much as they want. That would the most optimal solution.

    • @toomaskotkas4467
      @toomaskotkas4467 Год назад +2

      @@akaking7499 Got nothing to say? I thought so. Liar.

    • @akaking7499
      @akaking7499 Год назад +1

      @@toomaskotkas4467 I posted a massive comment! cant you read?

  • @ДаниилСоколов-д7ъ
    @ДаниилСоколов-д7ъ Год назад +2

    "Per aspera ad astra" (Через тернии к звёздам) was a first time I saw boobs in a soviet movie.

  • @sci_fi_kai
    @sci_fi_kai Год назад

    Thank you, this was a brilliant educational essay ^__^ I really enjoyed it

  • @sergeidubarev5079
    @sergeidubarev5079 Год назад +4

    To the other films already mentioned in the comments, I would add animated mini-series "Fantadroms" about a robot cat. :) The series were made in then-Soviet Latvia and started in 1985. I can recall three episodes but apparently there were more, and production actually stretched into the 90s.

    • @SlapstickGenius23
      @SlapstickGenius23 Год назад

      Fantadroms was made by a little known but now retired studio named Dauka. Its super crazy, surreally Latvian humour was one of the reasons why it wasn’t and still ain’t even dubbed into English for a long time.

    • @sergeidubarev5079
      @sergeidubarev5079 Год назад

      @@SlapstickGenius23 I loved it for unusual visuals and overall quirkiness. Now that I have recently re-watched one episode I've noticed that it also has a nice 80s electronic soundtrack! ... And one more thing: apparently, two versions of the same episodes with different music, voices, and editing exist! For example, "Laugh" (edited) vs "Takeoff Field of Fantasy" (original). Of course, in my childhood I saw the original one and I liked it better because of the consistent storytelling.

  • @gionnijohnson408
    @gionnijohnson408 11 дней назад

    Another great film i found was *"The Lilac Ball"* *(Лиловый Шар)* which was based off of one of the books from a dark children's sci-fi book series called *"The Adventures of Alisa Selezneva"* *(Приключения Алисы Селезневой)* who is a famous fictional child character in Russian sci-fi literature and cinema that spawned in a few cartoons and a two part TV film *"The Guest from the Future"* *(Гость из будущего)*

  • @Eden-xy7gk
    @Eden-xy7gk Год назад +2

    I would love to see something like this with Polish sci-fi - On the Silver Globe, The Hourglass Sanatorium, Golem

    • @kubricklynch
      @kubricklynch  Год назад +4

      I would definitely like to do that at some point.

  • @moshaw1235
    @moshaw1235 Год назад

    Oh, These films are mind blowing with their beauty

  • @Greamzih
    @Greamzih Год назад +2

    I would add a 1974 film "The Land of Sannikov". It's about a journey to a warm oasis in a polar region, so, I think, it qualifies as sci-fi.

  • @TiMonsor
    @TiMonsor Год назад

    great work you are doing, man!

  • @pepsiatlas5452
    @pepsiatlas5452 Год назад

    Totally fascinating! I gotta go watch some a this stuff now

  • @SamuraiAkechi
    @SamuraiAkechi Год назад +1

    5:27 that's strange, considering the fact that soviets had talkies at least by 1931, when The Sniper was released, the first movie that centers around military sharpshooting. I've got no idea why did they chose to stick to silent format.
    7:02 rotating wheel stations was first proposed by Tsiolkovsky, then theorised about by von Braun and Herman Potocnik.

  • @РабиндранатБагор
    @РабиндранатБагор 5 месяцев назад +1

    "The end of eternity" 1987 was based on a novel by Isaak Asimov. В 1987 году вышел фильм "Конец Вечности" по роману Азимова, режиссёр Ермаш, неплохой фильм. Был ещё мультфильм "Здесь водятся тигры" по Бредбери