Soviet
in sentence
1440 examples of Soviet in a sentence
In the 1920s, this is just shortly after
Soviet
Russia had a communist revolution.
You know the
Soviet
architecture of that building is the conservation.
And it's speculated that some of their interest in the arts was designed to counter
Soviet
communism and promote what it considered to be pro-American thoughts and aesthetics.
Stalin, Khrushchev and other
Soviet
leaders forced Russians out to the far east to be in gulags, labor camps, nuclear cities, whatever the case was.
Now let's look at another part of the world, the former
Soviet
Republics of Central Asia, the 'stans.
And he told me that the best time of his life was when he was a member of the Red Brigades and he went sailing, every summer, back and forth from Lebanon, where he would pick up
Soviet
weapons from the PLO, and then carry them all the way to Sardinia where the other arms organization from Europe would go and take their share of the arms.
Between 1966 and 1990, the U.S. and
Soviet
interests fought for control over my country.
East Europe:
Soviet
economy for a long time, but they come out after 10 years very, very differently.
There is only a hatred to
Soviet
army.
That is disgusting!! United States President Jimmy Carter had accepted the view that
"Soviet
aggression" could not be viewed as an isolated event of limited geographical importance but had to be contested as a potential threat to the Persian Gulf region.
A few examples: in an early scene
Soviet
infantry are attacked by the Germans; instead of staying in their trenches to shoot at them, they advance into open ground to fight them,contrary to all infantry tactics; Kate, one of the central characters, is supposedly the daughter of a White Russian and obsessed with her Russianness, yet she does not speak Russian; a guilt-stricken German airman attacks an anti-aircraft gun- the gun, however, does not fire shrapnel shells but scores a direct hit on his 'plane, which doesn't look much like a German 'plane of WWII.
Utterly ridiculous action scenes, putrid acting (Nick Nicholson's performance as the evil
soviet
commander is a must-see!)and
I think cheaters needs to be off the air and end the reality show once and for all i don't care what anyone says you can attack me or agree with me but its times like this that the show is just spewing out propaganda and the host of Cheaters Joey Greco is a little bastard who wants to think that showing people on camera is effective and unawares no it just will show disgusting he is also the wiretapping and following of people by "cheaters spy's" is illegal and a federal offense we are living in a police state like the
Soviet
union and Nazi Germany rolled into one i am happy that there is poor reviews on this trash this needs to end soon or we are going to lose our liberties as a nation no wonder our country is going to hell its because of this and other filth shows i liked the older shows better from the 1950s-1980s i hope you all agree with me on that thank you infowarrior
This puddle of derivative drivel stole from every
Soviet
film of note and failed miserably.
Modern Western man seems to be kind of out of sync and to need special evening classes to learn that democracy wants the majority in the world to be the majority, and the West is far from that majority, and that if the
Soviet
block had been able to understand that market economy is not capitalism but that market economy can be either socialist or capitalist the Berlin Wall would have fallen, but the other way round, and that China has learned that lesson marvelously well and is at the foot of the wall they have to climb over to learn that their socialist market economy has to lead to political democracy, but they will, just like Vietnam was able to reconstruct itself after thirty years of vicious war aggression and damage.
The title is important: Vera is the Russian word for "faith", identifying that punk Vera (Natalya Negoda) has little faith in the
Soviet
system.
Leading the pack of
Soviet
wolves is Yul Brynner, magnificent as a commandant and at his sexiest since he played opposite Kerr in "The King and I".
In the Belarus of 1942, two
Soviet
soldiers are captured by Nazi-friendly Belarusians.
The slow development of the characters, and the emphasis on their complicated relationships to each other, are somewhat reminiscent of The Commissar, another great
Soviet
film.
Soviet
film making of the highest order.
However, the movie can be considered great for many reasons, not the least of which is its true, gritty portrayal of disillusionment and pain in the family of a working class
Soviet
family.
1956 was the 20th Congress of the Communist Party and the
Soviet
Premier Krushchev made a speech denouncing Stalin and the Stalinist purges and the gulag labor systems, revealing information that was previously forbidden, publicly revealing horrible new truths, which opened the door for a new
Soviet
Cinema led by Mikhail Kalatozov, once Stalin's head of film production.
I would recommend this as the most successful attempt so far to make a movie on
Soviet
Afghan war.
I suspect there's some revisionist history going on here,but one definitely comes away with the feeling that Patrice Lumumba was a trouble-maker who incited his people to violence from the moment the Congo declared independence.His inability to control his people and his decision to bring in
Soviet
help to get his military back in line was obviously what got the United States involved and led to his assassination.However,by replacing him with Mobutu,the United States didn't solve anything.They made the situation just as bad.Well-acted with excellent cinematography and a rousing score.Definitely worth seeing.
by 1925 the
Soviet
government actively used the arts, including film, as a means to spread the message of the revolution.
Eisensteins portrayal of the revolt on the Battleship Potempkin offers the viewer insight into the message of the
Soviet
elite.
Filmed less than a year after the
Soviet
withdrawal from Afghanistan, the subject matter was fresh in the minds of the cast, the director and the audience.
The
Soviet
army cooperated quite a bit during filming, which is odd.
Pichul's brutal drama marks a strong departure from the images of sanitized idealism promoted in
Soviet
times (as in Aleksandrov's Circus), brashly moving the social chaos of his time into the public spotlight.
I saw this film many years ago (along with another of Shepitko's films, Wings) as part of a
Soviet
film series at a local film archive.
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