The Revolution That Wasn't

The Revolution That Wasn't (Russian: Революция, которой не было, Finnish: Vallankumous, jota ei tullut, Estonian: Revolutsioon, mida ei olnud) is a 2008 documentary film by Russian filmmaker Alyona Polunina, on the National Bolshevik Party and the Dissenters' March.

The Revolution That Wasn't
Directed byAlyona Polunina
Produced byJaak Kilmi
Written byAlyona Polunina
StarringAnatoliy Tishin
Grigori Tishin
Eduard Limonov
Andrei Dmitriev
CinematographyDmitri Rakov
Release date
  • 25 September 2008 (2008-09-25)
Running time
97 minutes
CountryRussia, Finland, Estonia
LanguageRussian

Content

The documentary shows the way of life of some Russian national-bolsheviks.[1][2][3] Young man Grigori Tishin is released from prison. Grigori spent several years in prison for participating in a direct action. He was among a group of national-bolsheviks who were staging an occupation of the Ministry of Health headquarters. After being released Grigori meets his father Anatoliy, who was in the past one of the National Bolshevik Party leaders. Anatoliy is disappointed in politics. At a party meeting, members of the NBP greet Grigori like a hero. After many years of political activity, Eduard Limonov becomes one of the leaders of Russian opposition. Anatoliy chooses religious life and becomes the helper of a priest in Orthodox church in Saint Petersburg. Andrei Dmitriev, leader of branch of the party in Saint Petersburg, still believe in the possibility of the revolution. Grigori becomes Limonov's personal bodyguard. Activists participate in Dissenters' March. But the opposition activity in the country becomes harder than they expected. National-bolsheviks participate in the funeral of their comrade Yuriy Chervochkin, who was murdered by unknown perpetrators.

Cast

Awards

gollark: The KSP way would probably just be to shove a bunch of ablative low-mass plates in front of the payload.
gollark: It's in what seems to be an official report, and they still called it "freedom gas".
gollark: But a lot of news outlets picked it up and it's not April 1st...
gollark: I thought it was satire when I first heard that.
gollark: That's isolated to there though.

See also

  • Da, smert (2004) – short documentary, by Alyona Polunina

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.