What did Soviets watch on TV and what sort of films did they enjoy? Were they even allowed televisions and film?

What did Soviets watch on TV and what sort of films did they enjoy? Were they even allowed televisions and film?

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youtube.com/watch?v=AJ66SC942Pc
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youtube.com/watch?v=gCJSSFV4e-8
youtube.com/watch?v=z2_dhUv_CrI
youtube.com/watch?v=QDBNMbJ8MBU
youtube.com/watch?v=Fnmtr-vgSVw
youtu.be/vEAR92xSKdo
youtube.com/watch?v=jWSxev7eJvs
youtube.com/watch?v=3gPQmD7qrkc
youtube.com/watch?v=3IcSmYGhGGg
youtube.com/watch?v=UWHn4p8k3gc
youtube.com/watch?v=2Z4m4lnjxkY
youtube.com/user/mosfilm
youtube.com/user/mishapanfilov
youtube.com/watch?v=WM260Gz0_Is
youtube.com/watch?v=0RRnCnO1Y2c
youtu.be/dExwT_pEr9w
youtu.be/a50qT9bW2Qo
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dailymotion.com/video/x4ib48s
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Is Poland (Polish People's Republic) good enough? I don't know what the Russians watched but I know what we watched.

>Were they even allowed televisions and film?
Of course. 'Seventeen moments of spring' was popular, pretty good spy series.

>Were they even allowed televisions and film?

American education

>Stawka większa niż życie (More Than Life at Stake, Stakes Larger Than Life or Playing for High Stakes) was a Polish black and white TV series about the adventures of a Polish secret agent, Hans Kloss (real name, Stanisław Kolicki, codename J-23), who acts as a double agent in the Abwehr during Second World War in occupied Poland.

youtube.com/watch?v=AJ66SC942Pc
Hans Kloss is our James Bond.

>Czterej pancerni i pies (Four tank-men and a dog). Story follows the adventures of a tank crew and their T-34 tank in the 1st Polish Army during World War II.

youtube.com/watch?v=F2lo8fsAOB4

space kino like this

youtube.com/watch?v=gCJSSFV4e-8

Fuck off Sup Forums.

Swan Lake. All day every day.

Mostly this.

youtube.com/watch?v=z2_dhUv_CrI

youtube.com/watch?v=QDBNMbJ8MBU

dont mind me jsut posting pioneer babes

youtube.com/watch?v=Fnmtr-vgSVw
WE WUZ HUSSARS

>nobody's posted Sandman yet

Are you brain dead? East block cinema was kino and vastly superior to what has been produced in the free market as everything gets dragged down to the lowest common denominator- culture was actually much more elitist, concentrated in select urban circles.

>Were they even allowed television and film
I hate westerners so fucking much, I hope China and North Korea nuke you literal faggots

youtu.be/vEAR92xSKdo

youtube.com/watch?v=jWSxev7eJvs
youtube.com/watch?v=3gPQmD7qrkc
youtube.com/watch?v=3IcSmYGhGGg

Even the girls were cuter than today.

youtube.com/watch?v=UWHn4p8k3gc

>Were they even allowed televisions and film?
Of course, and you can find quite a few of them on youtube. There's a Mosfilm channel with a ton of Soviet Movies.

The Soviet Snow Queen and Hedgehog in the Fog are like, two of the most influential pieces of animated work out there. The Snow Queen was heavily influential on the 70s-80s anime aesthetic with many of the anime producers of the era (Miyazaki, Takahata, Matsumoto) citing it as a huge influence on their work.

Parents grew up in Russia
This film was (and still is) pretty popular there: www.youtube.com/watch?v=a50qT9bW2Qo

They also watched the Russian Sherlock Holmes TV series and Russian cartoons like Vinni Puh (Winnie the Pooh)

I remember seeing a soviet ad for soap or some shit and it was literally just cute naked girls lathering eachother up. You saw everything, tits, vaj.
I guess nudity wasn't something people gave a shit about.

Casual or artistic nudity isn't a huge deal like it would be in large parts of the US.

>Were they even allowed televisions and film?

Americans everybody.
For some reason everyone thinks the USSR was this cold, grey, stagnant place, but in reality it was super clean, the buildings were shit quality but looked after well, there was a extreme sense of community and common good and there was a HUGE emphasis put in "high culture". You didn't get comic books or Capeshit TV shows or anything, but every village, town, city had numerous cultural halls where plays, ballet, opera, concerts etc were constantly put on. TV was filled with documentaries for the most part.
One of the biggest problems with Soviet culture imo was the focus on national folk culture rather than trying to create new things which was their downfall culturally, while the west had rock music, electronic music, disco etc, the USSR and it's satellites were pumping out the same old folk music and acoustic music and orchestral music.
Honestly the USSR and the Eastern Bloc was pretty much controlled by fedora tippers. You can see this at every level, go read Soviet laws, They're honestly feel like they were written by Thunderf00t or some shit.

>isn't familiar with eastern block television from at least 30 years ago
>braindead

I bet you think I am a faggot for not keeping any pigeons either.

>go read their laws
Stalin would be called a giant sperg if he was alive today. Also, you forgot breadlines and the purges

>For some reason everyone thinks the USSR was this cold, grey, stagnant place

Thats because all western depiction of the Eastern Bloc and USSR is based on Solzhenitsyn and pretty much the 30s and 40s and nothing else.

youtube.com/watch?v=2Z4m4lnjxkY

American propaganda about pretty much everything outside their country is fucking incredible. Even things that you can literally check in 10 seconds now with the internet but they still believe it, even AFTER they check it.

Tell me.

>>One of the biggest problems with Soviet culture imo was the focus on national folk culture rather than trying to create new things which was their downfall culturally, while the west had rock music, electronic music, disco etc, the USSR and it's satellites were pumping out the same old folk music and acoustic music and orchestral music.
Yugoslavia on the other hand had all the west pop culture mixed in with all of that, and it was pretty much the perfect place to live in.

RIP Non-aligned movement.

Help yourself, brochacho
youtube.com/user/mosfilm

A good start would be to watch everything in Leonid Gaidai’s filmography if you want “everyday” movies
Also this is a good channel if you’re curious about music
youtube.com/user/mishapanfilov

Interesting. Cheers m8

youtube.com/watch?v=WM260Gz0_Is

Had Serbian coworkers. They used to tell stories about how they would tie their neighbours who weren't serbian up between tractors and take bets on which limb was pulled off first. Even if your best friend was a Croatian or whatever "It was your duty to kill him".

The fall of Yugoslavia fucking SUCKED.

youtube.com/watch?v=0RRnCnO1Y2c

God-tier leader.

youtu.be/dExwT_pEr9w
>we will never EVER get Gaidaikino back
I just want more comfy comedies

RIP

Elven cloak @ 1:07

>Australia threatens to join the NA movement because the US refused to let us know what was happening in Pine Gap and ASIS had been working behind the backs of the Australian government with the CIA in overthrowing Allende who the Australian Government had friendly relations with.
>Within a year, our PM and Government had been overthrown by the Governor General who had links to CIA backed insitutions.

youtu.be/a50qT9bW2Qo
start with this one

...

>what did soviets watch on tv

Existential dread.

youtube.com/watch?v=5LNHYz89sNc

2 of the most celebrated documentaries ever made.

The Man with the Movie Camera
youtube.com/watch?v=z97Pa0ICpn8 - Revolutionary film making techniques documenting the every day life of people in the early USSR. (There is a 4K blu ray restoration out there)

Soy Cuba
dailymotion.com/video/x4ib48s - Famous for the same thing, crazy film making techniques which were revolutionary for the time.

These were like the Planet Earth docos in terms of revolutionary techniques in documentary film making of their eras.

>Asking a board that uses "Kino" to describe the best films if Soviets made any good movies

lol.

You're mistaking Soviets for 80s Romanians. Now that was a shitty TV schedule.

>19:53 The Socialist Republic of Romania National Anthem ("Trei culori")
>19:57 The Frontul Democrației și Unității Socialiste ("Democracy and Socialist Unity Front", FDUS) Anthem ("E scris pe tricolor Unire")
>19:59:30 Opening (clock)
>20:00 News ("Telejurnal")
>20:20 Special programs dedicated to Ceaușescu (documentary or musical shows)
>21:00 An episode of theatre play, opera or a movie[5]
>21:50 News ("Telejurnal")
>21:58 Closing ("Hora Unirii")

>Friday, 27 November 1987
>20:00 News, awaiting the Party's National Conference
>20:20 Bright message of peace, friendship and collaboration. The visit of comrade Nicolae Ceausescu together with comrade Elena Ceausescu in the Arab Republic of Egypt
>20:40 >The entire country welcomes the Party's National Conference. Fulfilled promises (documentary)
>20:55 World quadrant - Romania and the problems of the contemporary world
>21:10 Scientific serial. 'Universe, matter, life'. Materialistic-scientific educational show.
>21:40 Winners of the 'Praise to Romania' national festival
>21:55 News
>22:00 Closing