Tonight I rewatched one of my favorite movies of all time, Doctor Zhivago. For those of you who do not know it is a story of late Tsarist Russia, WW1, and the Russian Revolution along with its after math. It's one of the last truly epic films made by Metro Goldwyn Mayer and, at the time, no Russian director would make the film so the Russian author had to seek the help of an American film company. In the tradition of great Russian novelists such as Leo Tolstoy the book/film does not take sides but instead tells the story of life in all of its gritty and, yes, sometimes gory details. This is no doubt why Soviet authorities refused to make the movie. It was indeed critical of revolutionary forces when their actions warranted disapproval just as the author was with Tsarist or German forces or even of the selfish actions of the rich in Tsarist Russia.
If you haven't seen this movie before or even if you haven't seen it in a while, it was released in 1962, then I highly recommend taking the time to view it as it is a true classic. One day such a film may even be allowed to be made in Russia.
If you haven't seen this movie before or even if you haven't seen it in a while, it was released in 1962, then I highly recommend taking the time to view it as it is a true classic. One day such a film may even be allowed to be made in Russia.
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