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Susexx
06-08-10, 01:52 PM
Anti-war movie. Made in USSR. Old cartoon.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eZ1DeyRU2KU&feature=related

krashkart
06-08-10, 03:32 PM
Interesting. :)

Platapus
06-08-10, 06:44 PM
that's a pretty creepy video.

UnderseaLcpl
06-08-10, 07:10 PM
I have a question for you, Susexx, if you would be so kind. Why is it that so many Soviet films are so fatalistic? I've watched a number of Soviet war films, anti-war films, and even dramas and the like, but it seems like everyone always dies in the end. Does no-one in Russia have a sense of optimism?

Platapus
06-08-10, 07:13 PM
I have a question for you, Susexx, if you would be so kind. Why is it that so many Soviet films are so fatalistic? I've watched a number of Soviet war films, anti-war films, and even dramas and the like, but it seems like everyone always dies in the end. Does no-one in Russia have a sense of optimism?

If you lived in the old Soviet Union, would you have any sense of optimism? :06:

UnderseaLcpl
06-08-10, 07:20 PM
If you lived in the old Soviet Union, would you have any sense of optimism? :06:

I don't know, I never lived in the Soviet Union. I've heard some former Soviets who hated the Socialist Republics and some who pine for the lost Union. I have no kind of context with which to understand their mentality. That's why I'm asking the Russian, numnuts:O:

Happy Times
06-08-10, 10:22 PM
I don't know, I never lived in the Soviet Union. I've heard some former Soviets who hated the Socialist Republics and some who pine for the lost Union. I have no kind of context with which to understand their mentality. That's why I'm asking the Russian, numnuts:O:

My personal observations.

You can never fully understand them if you dont learn the language and live there.

You can try by reading their history especially from the time and end of the Mongol rule.
They are fatalistic and it seems to come from very tough times endured.

Individual Russians are usually very warm and welcoming persons.
But to be true friends with them is usually not so easy and they have a small but very loyal inner circle.
They really only trust these people.

Its when they are addressed as a nation or a group they are often a pain in the butt.
They have a practical sense about violence and war that conflicts with the western view.

They are often very curious about the outside world and its views towards them.
They are usually very proud of being Russian but still periodically have low esteem about themselfs.

All this combined explains a lot of the fatalistic attitude, dark humor and acceptance for authoritarian rule by small cliques.

Reece
06-09-10, 12:36 AM
that's a pretty creepy video.
More like nuts!!:yawn:

UnderseaLcpl
06-09-10, 02:12 AM
Thanks for those observations, HT.

Susexx
06-09-10, 12:14 PM
I have a question for you, Susexx, if you would be so kind. Why is it that so many Soviet films are so fatalistic? I've watched a number of Soviet war films, anti-war films, and even dramas and the like, but it seems like everyone always dies in the end. Does no-one in Russia have a sense of optimism?

When there was Soviet Union not it is necessary was to be the optimist or the pessimist, all was excellent. Factories worked, people lived, worked, fell in love, died. A normal rhythm of a life. There was to spit on a dollar exchange rate, cost of oil knew nobody, to serve in army was honourable and it is interesting. Institutes let out the best in the world of doctors, builders, military... And films and books with a bad ending were that people understood that all this paradise not simply so, it can soon come to an end. Then to the power has come to bitch-Gorbachev both simple and peace people became slaves, yes slaves... I would like to live further in Soviet Union and to accept from Europe and America only good and to share only good, without these idiotic Cold Wars.

p/s The Russian person always in an image of any barbarian is a pity to me that. In all politicians are guilty, they and create images of people. History repeats itself and I hope there will be still a revolution and will live again well.

kiwi_2005
06-09-10, 12:56 PM
Its always the pessimistic ones you have to be weary off. When I think of russians the first thing that comes to mind is WW2 and how they pushed back the fascist out of their motherland and marched right into Germany like true conqueror's. If that aint optimism then what is?


At Allied conferences the squat, pockmarked, non intellectual Stalin looked unimpressive. But he was a wily negotiator. Britain's Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden wrote: 'If I had to pick a team for going into a conference room, Stalin would be my first choice...."He never stormed, he was seldom even irritated. Hooded, calm, never raising his voice...he got what he wanted.

Susexx
06-09-10, 01:12 PM
By the way, if optimism that for comparison is necessary esteem German and Russian fairy tales, optimism will suffice for 100 years.

antikristuseke
06-09-10, 03:03 PM
I don't know, I never lived in the Soviet Union. I've heard some former Soviets who hated the Socialist Republics and some who pine for the lost Union. I have no kind of context with which to understand their mentality. That's why I'm asking the Russian, numnuts:O:

Basically take everything Susexx describes and reverse it, that is how lifein the soviet union looked like from this side, the side of an occupied country that "voulentarily" joined the brotherhood of socialist republics.
To serve in the soviet army was not a privilege, but at times a death sentence, the conditions in the army, as my uncle who served in Afghanistan describes, were horrible at the best of times. My father had a bit of a better time in the navy.
While the factories worked they produced useless crap. People saw it as a duty to steal from the places they worked at. No one was motivated.
Freedom as such did not really exist, while there were elections for some
positions only party approved people ran, and even then there was a clear favorite who had to win. 99.8% of the population voted, yay.:shifty:
The soviet onion did not fall apart because Gorbatchev was put in power, it was a sinking ship well before that, the economy was not able to sustain itself because it produced items of no value on the internal or external market, the farming industry had huge setbacks as really, really stupid mistakes were made in crop engineering which failed spectacularly. If anything people were slaves before the collapse of the onion, after that we do havea lot more freedom and will not be shot for having an opinion, wont be dragged to the kgb building basement to be tortured.

Most people who miss the soviet union never lived in it, or lived in a position where they were more equal than others. In short it was petty ****, not quite the hellhole the western media made it out to be but just as far from the paradise the ironically named Pravda made it out to be either. The only way to make it was to adopt a fatalistic view of life and develop a darksense of humour that goes with that.

Susexx
06-09-10, 04:50 PM
Basically take everything Susexx describes and reverse it, that is how lifein the soviet union looked like from this side, the side of an occupied country that "voulentarily" joined the brotherhood of socialist republics.
To serve in the soviet army was not a privilege, but at times a death sentence, the conditions in the army, as my uncle who served in Afghanistan describes, were horrible at the best of times. My father had a bit of a better time in the navy.
While the factories worked they produced useless crap. People saw it as a duty to steal from the places they worked at. No one was motivated.
Freedom as such did not really exist, while there were elections for some
positions only party approved people ran, and even then there was a clear favorite who had to win. 99.8% of the population voted, yay.:shifty:
The soviet onion did not fall apart because Gorbatchev was put in power, it was a sinking ship well before that, the economy was not able to sustain itself because it produced items of no value on the internal or external market, the farming industry had huge setbacks as really, really stupid mistakes were made in crop engineering which failed spectacularly. If anything people were slaves before the collapse of the onion, after that we do havea lot more freedom and will not be shot for having an opinion, wont be dragged to the kgb building basement to be tortured.

Most people who miss the soviet union never lived in it, or lived in a position where they were more equal than others. In short it was petty ****, not quite the hellhole the western media made it out to be but just as far from the paradise the ironically named Pravda made it out to be either. The only way to make it was to adopt a fatalistic view of life and develop a darksense of humour that goes with that.

To whom in the Union was badly, to that and now in independence is disgustingly. To me of 40 years and I saw that for the country was and in what it has turned. I recommend to watch TV less, it knowingly name "zombie-box". Give we will not water each other with a dirt, especially as to history of our former "general" country. It seems to me not absolutely correctly.

antikristuseke
06-09-10, 04:55 PM
I am sorry, but I find you very difficult to understand could you please rephrase. What I posted does not come from tv, but from people in my immediate and extended family, coworkers and my own experiences.

As far as Estonia is concerned things are a lot better now than they were before. I am not trying to throw dirt on you, if that is what you ment, I am just giving you my perspective on a period of history.

Susexx
06-09-10, 05:05 PM
Ок, I consider that in the history of Soviet Union there were also unpleasant moments. In my family too it is a lot of victims both from a Gulag and from war in Afghanistan and the Chechen Republic. But I would not began to say that was badly. Many aspects of social policy were much more above than now. Likely before Christopher Columbus's arrival to America too was and it is good and bad simultaneously.

With friendly greetings, yours the neighbour, Susexx!

antikristuseke
06-09-10, 05:22 PM
Of course, there were good things and there were bad things, but overall I prefer the situation now to what it was then.

OneToughHerring
06-09-10, 05:23 PM
I think there is a kind of Slavic mentality that is quite melancholic in art, just read some of the books they've written like War & Peace, Dr Zhivago, etc., not many happy endings there. Partly I guess this is due to the fact that Russia/USSR has always been a pretty difficult place to live to the average people. With the Czar they had land slavery etc. and then came socialism and the basic things improved a little but a lot of things led to power struggles and eventually the iron curtain.

Susexx
06-09-10, 05:32 PM
Ok guys, cartoon with positive end :D
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=74yduAcKyD8

CCIP
06-09-10, 05:52 PM
My personal observations.

You can never fully understand them if you dont learn the language and live there.

You can try by reading their history especially from the time and end of the Mongol rule.
They are fatalistic and it seems to come from very tough times endured.

Individual Russians are usually very warm and welcoming persons.
But to be true friends with them is usually not so easy and they have a small but very loyal inner circle.
They really only trust these people.

Its when they are addressed as a nation or a group they are often a pain in the butt.
They have a practical sense about violence and war that conflicts with the western view.

They are often very curious about the outside world and its views towards them.
They are usually very proud of being Russian but still periodically have low esteem about themselfs.

All this combined explains a lot of the fatalistic attitude, dark humor and acceptance for authoritarian rule by small cliques.
:salute:

As a Russian myself, I would have to say that's an extremely accurate general description. You definitely have a good understanding of the culture in this regard.

Otherwise as far as former republics, look, it's not the Russians that have to apologize. It's their unelected and oppressive leaders. While I completely understand that the republics and other countries of the "near abroad" have definitely been wronged and were relatively worse off under Soviet pressure/rule than independently, I disagree that they got the short end of the stick. If anyone did, it was almost always the Russians themselves. In fact day-to-day conditions in republics, from what I know, were better than the Russian SSR itself (and I know this from having relatives in Estonia myself) for most of Soviet rule. But again, perhaps Russians just had less to miss as far as freedom and prosperity goes...

That said, I'm personally sorry that it had to be that way. I wish those mistreated by Soviet authorities, however, would stop projecting their anger and disdain onto today's Russians (and at least to some extent today's Russian state, although it does deserve a fair amount of skepticism). Most of those complicit in the injustices of those days are dead or at least retired now. And I really wish that the new generation of Russians grows up without the impression that the rest of the world hates them for wrongs that they as individuals never really had a part in.

And that is a really great animation, by the way. Very original visual style, thoughtful (if indeed very glum) concept.

krashkart
06-09-10, 06:06 PM
Ok guys, cartoon with positive end :D
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=74yduAcKyD8


"Minister of Customs" lmao :rotfl2:

Okay, still watching.... :DL


[Later]
Hey, that was a cute cartoon. I love how he gets his cards back. :DL

Susexx
06-09-10, 06:12 PM
:salute:

As a Russian myself, I would have to say that's an extremely accurate general description. You definitely have a good understanding of the culture in this regard.

Otherwise as far as former republics, look, it's not the Russians that have to apologize. It's their unelected and oppressive leaders. While I completely understand that the republics and other countries of the "near abroad" have definitely been wronged and were relatively worse off under Soviet pressure/rule than independently, I disagree that they got the short end of the stick. If anyone did, it was almost always the Russians themselves. In fact day-to-day conditions in republics, from what I know, were better than the Russian SSR itself (and I know this from having relatives in Estonia myself) for most of Soviet rule. But again, perhaps Russians just had less to miss as far as freedom and prosperity goes...

That said, I'm personally sorry that it had to be that way. I wish those mistreated by Soviet authorities, however, would stop projecting their anger and disdain onto today's Russians (and at least to some extent today's Russian state, although it does deserve a fair amount of skepticism).

And that is a really great animation, by the way. Very original visual style, thoughtful (if indeed very glum) concept.

It agree completely.

Susexx
06-09-10, 06:16 PM
Hey, that was a cute cartoon. I love how he gets his cards back. :DL

You want still Russian cartoon films? :DL

krashkart
06-09-10, 06:29 PM
You want still Russian cartoon films? :DL

Sure, post away. I should add some to my YouTube favorites. :salute:

Susexx
06-09-10, 06:35 PM
Very malicious cartoon film in two parts. Writer Gauf me always scarecrows about the fairy tales
part 1 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FCvQaQ7xRN4&feature=PlayList&p=6C8BD5C1D1C8D19A&playnext_from=PL&playnext=1&index=42

part 2 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p1IQTKbnnds&feature=related

And funny

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2YqSIiq-lT0&feature=related

TLAM Strike
06-09-10, 06:47 PM
Thanks Susexx! I really enjoyed the Tank and Playing Cards cartoons. :salute:

Both of those would make good Twilight Zone or Outer Limits episodes! :yeah:

Susexx
06-09-10, 06:51 PM
Thanks Susexx! I really enjoyed the Tank and Playing Cards cartoons. :salute:

Both of those would make good Twilight Zone or Outer Limits episodes! :yeah:

Simply the theme has for some reason begun sad and I have decided to cheer a little up. :D

TLAM Strike
06-09-10, 11:11 PM
Very malicious cartoon film in two parts. Writer Gauf me always scarecrows about the fairy tales
part 1 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FCvQaQ7xRN4&feature=PlayList&p=6C8BD5C1D1C8D19A&playnext_from=PL&playnext=1&index=42


I think Chewbacca makes a cameo at 1:58... :haha:

Happy Times
06-10-10, 02:01 AM
:salute:

As a Russian myself, I would have to say that's an extremely accurate general description. You definitely have a good understanding of the culture in this regard.

Otherwise as far as former republics, look, it's not the Russians that have to apologize. It's their unelected and oppressive leaders. While I completely understand that the republics and other countries of the "near abroad" have definitely been wronged and were relatively worse off under Soviet pressure/rule than independently, I disagree that they got the short end of the stick. If anyone did, it was almost always the Russians themselves. In fact day-to-day conditions in republics, from what I know, were better than the Russian SSR itself (and I know this from having relatives in Estonia myself) for most of Soviet rule. But again, perhaps Russians just had less to miss as far as freedom and prosperity goes...

That said, I'm personally sorry that it had to be that way. I wish those mistreated by Soviet authorities, however, would stop projecting their anger and disdain onto today's Russians (and at least to some extent today's Russian state, although it does deserve a fair amount of skepticism). Most of those complicit in the injustices of those days are dead or at least retired now. And I really wish that the new generation of Russians grows up without the impression that the rest of the world hates them for wrongs that they as individuals never really had a part in.

And that is a really great animation, by the way. Very original visual style, thoughtful (if indeed very glum) concept.

Thank you and in principal i agree, my beef is with the version of history promoted in Russia.

It is dualistic like many other things in Russia.
Government can condemn and promote Stalins time for example.
Russians desire to be excepted as European but at the same time want to hold that they are something different.

To me Russia is an matryoshka doll, enigma within enigma.:DL
Often i understand some events or reactions after they have happened when i get past the Finnish mindset.

UnderseaLcpl
06-10-10, 08:15 AM
Thank you all for the interesting perspectives. :salute:

I have to admit, the Soviet Union still sounds like a living hell to me, but it's nice to get some perspective on the quality of life there. The only perspective I have comes from my Ukranian stepmother, who alternates between loving and hating the Soviet Union. When she has to pay for a doctor's appointment she loves the Union. When she goes to Wal-Mart she hates it.

As interesting as these perspectives are, I think I'm more comfortable with my Western lifestyle and mindset; "Better dead, than Red":DL

antikristuseke
06-10-10, 08:16 AM
:salute:

As a Russian myself, I would have to say that's an extremely accurate general description. You definitely have a good understanding of the culture in this regard.

Otherwise as far as former republics, look, it's not the Russians that have to apologize. It's their unelected and oppressive leaders. While I completely understand that the republics and other countries of the "near abroad" have definitely been wronged and were relatively worse off under Soviet pressure/rule than independently, I disagree that they got the short end of the stick. If anyone did, it was almost always the Russians themselves. In fact day-to-day conditions in republics, from what I know, were better than the Russian SSR itself (and I know this from having relatives in Estonia myself) for most of Soviet rule. But again, perhaps Russians just had less to miss as far as freedom and prosperity goes...

That said, I'm personally sorry that it had to be that way. I wish those mistreated by Soviet authorities, however, would stop projecting their anger and disdain onto today's Russians (and at least to some extent today's Russian state, although it does deserve a fair amount of skepticism). Most of those complicit in the injustices of those days are dead or at least retired now. And I really wish that the new generation of Russians grows up without the impression that the rest of the world hates them for wrongs that they as individuals never really had a part in.

And that is a really great animation, by the way. Very original visual style, thoughtful (if indeed very glum) concept.

Dontī't disagree with anything you have said here. :salute:

But I do project some disdain towards Russians here in Estonia who flat out refuse to learn the language, but still demand citizenship and other assorted problems from that contingent of people.

CCIP
06-10-10, 08:53 AM
Dontī't disagree with anything you have said here. :salute:

But I do project some disdain towards Russians here in Estonia who flat out refuse to learn the language, but still demand citizenship and other assorted problems from that contingent of people.

Totally understandable. While I think many Russians are treated kind of unfairly in the Baltic just because they're Russian, I think some of the habits have to change. Russians have plenty to learn of good civic habits there anyway - I just wish both sides would tone down the nationalism a little. When I went to Estonia in the early 90s, it really struck me how much more civil, clean and quiet the place seemed than neighbouring Russia. Those things are worth protecting from too much Russian influence than national identity as such, I think.

I have a lot of relatives in Estonia (ironically, they're more German and Swedish by blood than Russian) and most of them, I would say, are doing pretty well. They're not stuck on national identity and are active members of their communities instead. I wish everyone could just do that.

antikristuseke
06-10-10, 10:16 AM
Agreed, rabbid nationalism does noone any good.