Dawn of Paris
Dawn of Paris (Russian: Зори Парижа) is a 1936 Soviet drama film directed by Grigori Roshal.[1][2][3][4]
Dawn of Paris | |
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Russian: Зори Парижа | |
Directed by | Grigori Roshal |
Written by |
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Starring |
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Music by | Nikolai Kryukov |
Cinematography | Leonid Kosmatov |
Country | Soviet Union |
Language | Russian |
Plot
The film tells about the Polish revolutionary democrat, Jaroslav Dombrowski, who led the army of the Paris Commune in 1871.[5]
Cast
- Nikolai Plotnikov as General Dombrovsky
- Yelena Maksimova as Catherine Millard (as Ye. Maksimova)
- Andrei Abrikosov as Etienne Millard
- Viktor Stanitsyn as Battalion commander Shtaiper (as V. Stanitsin)
- Dmitri Dorlyak as Eugene Gorrot
- Anatoliy Goryunov as Richet the artist (as A. Goryunov)
- Vladimir Belokurov as Prosecutor Rigot
- Vera Maretskaya as Mother Pinchot[6]
gollark: Anyway! The next bit of code checks that the OmniDisk's UUID (this is not the disk ID, this is added as part of the signed code when the disk is written) is in the list downloaded from the internet, and verifies the allowed permissions and stuff.
gollark: GAAAAAH SO STUPID AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
gollark: On v2 disks the code which is loaded will download the second stage environment from the internet with a few parameters passed in; on v1 disks it's just loaded directly.
gollark: AES-256.
gollark: Anyway, quick rundown of OmniDisk execution: first, an OmniDisk's digital signature is checked against the stored public key. I can't invalidate signatures remotely, so any disk I've ever issued will still *run* under the privileged potatOS environment.
References
External links
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