The Death of Stalin - The Coup

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  • Опубліковано 31 гру 2020
  • The Death of Stalin 2017
    When tyrannical dictator Joseph Stalin dies in 1953, his parasitic cronies square off in a frantic power struggle to become the next Soviet leader. Among the contenders are the dweebish Georgy Malenkov, the wily Nikita Khrushchev and Lavrenti Beria -- the sadistic secret police chief. As they bumble, brawl and back-stab their way to the top, the question remains -- just who is running the government?
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  • Фільми й анімація

КОМЕНТАРІ • 3,5 тис.

  • @thekhoifish0146
    @thekhoifish0146 3 роки тому +8711

    Colourised footage of my group trying to work on the group project planning

    • @tsarbombawithinternetconne875
      @tsarbombawithinternetconne875 3 роки тому +439

      Beria is that one groupmate that would fuck everything up

    • @whoknowswhocares885
      @whoknowswhocares885 3 роки тому +219

      I take it one guy wasn’t contributing anything or he tried to take all the credit. So you had him shot before he turned anything in.

    • @thekhoifish0146
      @thekhoifish0146 3 роки тому +105

      @@whoknowswhocares885 yup! the court trial was a bit rough but I ended up ok

    • @awddfg
      @awddfg 3 роки тому +34

      @KingArthurII *_I'm always the one that ends up leading the entire project_*

    • @bmort1313
      @bmort1313 3 роки тому +58

      Molotov would be that one guy who constantly asks the teacher if everything is as they expected

  • @rjelruiz5867
    @rjelruiz5867 9 місяців тому +2721

    "It's too late. The only choice we have is between his death or his revenge."
    Prigozhin chose poorly.

    • @markoprskalo6127
      @markoprskalo6127 4 місяці тому +77

      1:16 Brezhnev is badass here
      He is my favorite Soviet leader
      Brezhnev is pointing gun at Beria

    • @nathansullivan4433
      @nathansullivan4433 3 місяці тому +48

      @@markoprskalo6127And here I had no idea that was Brezhnev!

    • @CamilomboNPC
      @CamilomboNPC 3 місяці тому +32

      It was an accident! An accident when the plane falls in a dive

    • @NicoCrippleExtremistMatsoukas
      @NicoCrippleExtremistMatsoukas 3 місяці тому +8

      Brezhnev was pointing the gun?? Is that creative licence or was he actually there???

    • @Pucukax
      @Pucukax 2 місяці тому +9

      @@markoprskalo6127 Brezhnev is the one who's searching Berija. Look at his eyebrows.

  • @simonnachreiner8380
    @simonnachreiner8380 Рік тому +5892

    Zhukov is actually quoted as saying that killing Beria was _the_ most important moment in his life. Not ww2, not Mongolia, not even when he was pinned under his horse.
    Killing this monster was the most important thing the Hero of the Union ever did and that really says something.

    • @mccarthy5825
      @mccarthy5825 Рік тому +103

      Is there any good documentaries or books(especially books) you can recommend to read about him?

    • @hardassteel
      @hardassteel Рік тому +96

      The most important thing he ever did was invade Berlin and conquer Germany.

    • @mccarthy5825
      @mccarthy5825 Рік тому

      @@hardassteel there's a great line in the film where he says to Nikita ' I fucked Germany, I think I can fuck a fleshlump in a waistcoat' 😂
      He was an incredible man and its good that this movie taught more people about him

    • @sdts8847
      @sdts8847 Рік тому +50

      Not without Rokossovsky he didn't

    • @soggmeisterlasagnagarfield
      @soggmeisterlasagnagarfield Рік тому +287

      Zhukov is supposed to be the Soviet Man, while Beria is supposed to be everything the Union should have destroyed. The problem is, they’re both Soviet. I think that’s probably one of the main points of the movie.

  • @kamalindsey
    @kamalindsey Рік тому +9995

    Fun fact, when Stalin introduced Beria to Churchill he called him "our Himmler." Very accurate comparison. Stalin also advised his daughter to never be in a room with him alone, so Stalin definitely knew how horrible Beria was.

    • @Anders357
      @Anders357 Рік тому +1277

      Stalins daughter WAS alone with Berija for a while, in the summer 36-37-38-39 is a very nice photo when Svetlana is sitting on the lap of Uncle Berija. There was one instance where Berija came to Stalin's home, and waited for Stalin to arrive.
      When Stalin heard that Berija was at his home, alone with his children, he hurried home instantly. Stalin was very fond of Svetlana.

    • @Nonsense010688
      @Nonsense010688 Рік тому +298

      interesting. I know that during a Meeting with the German ambassador before Operation Barbarossa, he apparently also introduce Beria as "our Himmler"

    • @nocucksinkekistan7321
      @nocucksinkekistan7321 Рік тому +49

      everyone but me gotta learn ur cringe

    • @englandtownwalks891
      @englandtownwalks891 Рік тому +228

      You should read the book ''Stalin: The court of the Red Tsar''. It's very insightful and goes in full detail as to what was really going in Stalins inner circle and especially very detailed tales about Berias monstrous acts.

    • @mrnippletwister7342
      @mrnippletwister7342 Рік тому +1

      actually Beria was a pedofile. There was a lot of speculations about it even at that time. When you was 50 he seen a cute-looking girl at the street at send his NKVD goon to stalk her. Later it was found that this girl was 16, Beria raped her and thay had a bastard baby.

  • @boxymccutter9623
    @boxymccutter9623 2 роки тому +10348

    What I love most is that Zhukov is both taking this whole ordeal with deep seriousness and treating it as a sunny afternoon game at the same time.

    • @attysthoughts3253
      @attysthoughts3253 2 роки тому +944

      well... compared to defeating the Nazis and surviving Stalin's purges, this was a sunny afternoon game for him

    • @mst3KGf
      @mst3KGf 2 роки тому +704

      His whole attitude during the film is that of a guy who knows he's completely untouchable since he's the idolized WWII hero with the army devoted to him. So he can troll anyone he wants and do stuff like punching Stalin's own son in the gut, completely secure in the knowledge that no one will stop him.

    • @timengineman2nd714
      @timengineman2nd714 Рік тому

      After WW1, The Revolution, ALL os Stalin's (and Beria's) Purges, WW2; this was basally nothing!

    • @thegreenreaper6660
      @thegreenreaper6660 Рік тому +1

      I'm going to have to report this comment! Threatening to do harm to a member of the presidium, in the process of ....
      ...
      ..
      .
      Look at your fucking face!!
      Zhukov fucked Germany! He can take that fleshlump in a waistcoat!

    • @JaegerRukajarvi
      @JaegerRukajarvi Рік тому +249

      It's the disposition of a person at the top of their profession who still loves what they do. When you're that experienced, you already know what to do and expect, and you're so relaxed as a result that cracking jokes and making small talk just comes naturally no matter the seriousness.

  • @strange7842
    @strange7842 2 роки тому +2842

    "This is a lavatory!"
    "Well, you should feel at home then, shouldn't you, you little coil of shit?"
    God I love this movie.

    • @alexandrebertrand-lafleur3114
      @alexandrebertrand-lafleur3114 Рік тому +55

      The answer of Mikoyan to Beria is a 10/10 for me! I like how Paul Whitehouse reply to Russell Beale in this scene!

    • @michaellynes3540
      @michaellynes3540 Рік тому +111

      “Fuck me. Georgy’s eyes really do follow you around the crapper. Weird.”

    • @-et37-
      @-et37- Рік тому +18

      @@michaellynes3540 My favorite line in the entire movie.

    • @omemahmud2963
      @omemahmud2963 Рік тому +1

      Movie name?

    • @kansairobot2015
      @kansairobot2015 Рік тому +1

      @@omemahmud2963 the death of stalin

  • @LastGunslinger1
    @LastGunslinger1 10 місяців тому +595

    "The army is back, did you miss us" was low-key impressive

    • @scoutdude4455
      @scoutdude4455 3 місяці тому

      They just nonchalantly cuck the NKVD, beautiful

  • @DonPatrono
    @DonPatrono Рік тому +2455

    Fun fact: when Stalin died in 1953, the AK47 Type 1 was still top notch military technology that hadn't seen mass distribution yet (due to it being milled instead of stamped, a more time-cnsuming production method), so the vast majority of the armed forces still had the SKS and the old Mosins. It's a nice little detail that the only people seen with an AK in this coup are Zhukov and Brezhnev, which no doubt moved a bit of waters to be able to get them

    • @5roundsrapid263
      @5roundsrapid263 11 місяців тому +107

      They’re still using Mosins on both sides in Ukraine today, among so many other conflicts. They just can’t die.

    • @cynicat74
      @cynicat74 11 місяців тому +82

      @@5roundsrapid263 My favorite rifle is the Mosin Nagant it doesn't need oil at all, and it's so satisfying when you shoot it, its like getting drop kicked in the shoulder. You dont even need to reload the mosin, they're so cheap that you can just buy a new one when the ammo runs out. The best part about shooting them is the visit to to chiropractor after youre done shooting it. Or if you cant get to one, just use the next shot to put your shoulder back into place. I actually keep a mosin around the house, and use it as a hammer or if someone breaks in, i can use it as a club or pike, i also use the bayonet to make shishkabobs when babooshka isnt around. I once put the bayonet on the gun, and stood up, i took a one foot chunk of plaster out of the ceiling and my wife wouldnt talk to me for a week. And the smell when you buy 10 of them, you open the crate and are met with the smell of cosmoline, low grade shellac, and the 100 year old blood of facist pigs long dead. When i was on the pole vault team during high school, i find that the long poles were too flimsy, so i just used my mosin nagant, I won first place. When i was in the navy, i found that the deck cannons were too small, and secretly replaced them with mosin nagants, we destroyed 50 ships that day. One time i ran over a mosin nagant, my car exploded destroying the 50 mosins in my trunk... the thing wasnt even loaded and luckily i have another 500 at home, so it wasnt a big loss. One time i was out camping, and had no firewood, so i shot a tree. It was blown in half and now i had firewood. Once i forgot my lighter at home but had my trusty mosin with me, so i tried to light a cigarette with it, i destroyed the cigarette and my entire upper body. I once went to an airsoft battle with my mosin, and fired blanks, i won. When i was on my high school baseball team, i realized that bats are too expensive, so i used my mosin, every time i hit the ball it was so far away that rifles were banned from my baseball team. Instead of lawn darts, my family used mosin nagants for fun, they're 10 times as lethal for 1/10th the price. Once when i ran out of ammo and didnt have another mosin handy i just rigged it to shoot chain linked ammo. Once when i was playing moses in a kindergarten play, god wouldnt part the waters for me, so i just fired my mosin and the waters parted. Instead of truck nuts, i hang a mosin nagant on my trailer hitch. When going across the volga everyone forgot their boat oars, so we just used our mosins. When target shooting, i have to have the target at 150 meters away because at 100 the muzzle is going through the target. The mosin nagant has fought in many wars against itself, and has won every time. I shot a mosin nagant at work once, and its muzzle flash set off the sprinkler system. Once i was out of firewood and had 50 mosins in the trunk of my car, so i piled up 49 of them shot the pile and ended up starting a forest fire in an area with no trees. One of my mosins came free with the purchase of a bayonet. I once Shot a mosin into the ground, that area is now known as the Vredefort crater.
      Mosin is love
      Mosin is life

    • @ToxicFarm
      @ToxicFarm 11 місяців тому

      you talk about stalin and found traces of drugs in the white house?

    • @twistedyogert
      @twistedyogert 11 місяців тому +22

      Now I know why the AK and it's derivatives are so common in some parts of the world. Dirt cheap since millions perhaps billions were made and they last forever.

    • @extremely.hung.individual2693
      @extremely.hung.individual2693 9 місяців тому +6

      @@cynicat74 oh my fucking god 😂

  • @trenttrip6205
    @trenttrip6205 3 роки тому +6170

    I love how Georgy only starts saying “he deserves a trial!” after they make fun of his portrait lmao

    • @robertwalker5794
      @robertwalker5794 2 роки тому +630

      I think that was his poor attempts to try and regain control. Throughout the movie, Georgy thought he was in charge but now, he is realizing that it was Beria who had all the real power.

    • @matthewriley7826
      @matthewriley7826 2 роки тому +311

      @@robertwalker5794 Or even earlier than that when Khrushchev all but told him Beria was going down and he naively thought he could demote him to “Minister of Fisheries”.

    • @ovilexx7744
      @ovilexx7744 2 роки тому +86

      They really sound like best friends on highschool with zhukov leading the gang🤣

    • @thiagodeandrade7081
      @thiagodeandrade7081 Рік тому +4

      Priorities.

    • @seregapetrov4376
      @seregapetrov4376 Рік тому

      Здрава глиномесы! Вы нихуя не знаете про Россию..

  • @willnash7907
    @willnash7907 3 роки тому +6684

    I had no idea the post-Stalinist struggle took place in Middle England.

    • @Artur-fj5pn
      @Artur-fj5pn 3 роки тому +411

      you learn something new everyday

    • @willnash7907
      @willnash7907 3 роки тому +420

      @@Artur-fj5pn
      It is a stellar cast though.

    • @samtrotter7177
      @samtrotter7177 2 роки тому +114

      Where the hell is "Middle England?"

    • @alexandersavvin1024
      @alexandersavvin1024 2 роки тому +486

      @@samtrotter7177 somewhere next to Middle Earth I guess

    • @alexanderthegreat1270
      @alexanderthegreat1270 2 роки тому +489

      I noticed that too, but it’s actually a deliberate detail by the directors! It’s meant to demonstrate the different regions of the USSR that the top soviet leaders came from.
      For example, Georgy Malenkov speaks in a very regal British accent because he was born in Orenberg into a wealthy family of Russian officers, while Kruschev talks in a working class American accent due to his youth in a poor Russian village.
      The biggest accent is Stalin’s cockney, demonstrating his childhood in rough, poverty stricken Georgia and his brutish nature as a leader.

  • @prathification
    @prathification Рік тому +392

    The guy who plays Beria does such a good job. From being a malignant psychopath early on to the scheming and eventually as he realizes he’s dead. Just great acting.

    • @pendorran
      @pendorran Рік тому +16

      Simon Russell Beale is an amazing actor.

    • @chadgrylls5264
      @chadgrylls5264 2 місяці тому +2

      Looks so similar, too. The man ballooned in his 50s

  • @ferghalicious1480
    @ferghalicious1480 11 місяців тому +419

    “It’s too late.”
    One of the most powerful lines in the film. Nikita wasn’t just talking about the coup when he said that.

  • @wizardofoz9803
    @wizardofoz9803 3 роки тому +12718

    Imagine knowing what kind of a monster Beria is, but you are unable to do anything because of Stalin. This moment must have been a gift from the heavens.

    • @thisisajang
      @thisisajang 3 роки тому +132

      Indeed. It was alleged that Beria even molested Svetlana Stalin when she was a little girl.

    • @cristianiiv6418
      @cristianiiv6418 3 роки тому +485

      @@thisisajang probably false , stalin would do something if he did somthing like this

    • @psychedelicsoul3260
      @psychedelicsoul3260 3 роки тому +737

      Naah even Beria knew not to fuck with Stalin

    • @Nachoto
      @Nachoto 3 роки тому +156

      The only day the soviet people were happier than the day Stalin died is the day when Beria died

    • @JaketheJust
      @JaketheJust 3 роки тому +301

      Stalin knew that Beria was a sexual predator. Once he learned his daughter was alone with him, he called her and told her to get out of the house now. When Stalin was on his deathbed, in front of him, Beria began to mock Stalin. While this was happening, Stalin regain consciousness and appeared to recovered, Beria got on his knees, kissed Stalin’s hand and begged his forgiveness. This man was a true sexual predator and a coward. No wonder called Beria The Soviets “Himmler.”

  • @alaybozan2634
    @alaybozan2634 3 роки тому +4831

    2:40 "How long before the army is here?"
    -the Minister of Defense
    God, I love this movie so much.

    • @noobster4779
      @noobster4779 3 роки тому +631

      To be fair he couldnt really organize the troops "officially" to take over because Beria would have known instantly. A lot in typical coup instances works over the "second row" personal, in this case the generals, because they can act far more low key. it is not to unrealistic that he doesnt know exactly when his troops would be arriving because he propably didnt know where exactly they were waiting to spring into action. the coup units were most likely not still in their barracks and it is simple panic as well.
      In reality this was a lot more "organized" and safe because Cruschev had managed to get Berias two top officers to betray him. They basically organized it that the nkvd wouldnt really be resisting the coup. it is indirectly shown by the nkvd officer here not firering on the soldiers despite him knowing the army is hardly there without previous notice to eat cake.

    • @Idras74
      @Idras74 2 роки тому +107

      The whole movie summed up in one sentence.

    • @ninofromkitchennightmares1497
      @ninofromkitchennightmares1497 2 роки тому +86

      @@noobster4779 Yeah
      And if he wanted to mobilize them in the city Beria would obviously know because he is in charge of the NKVD which is basically internal security

    • @ninofromkitchennightmares1497
      @ninofromkitchennightmares1497 2 роки тому +53

      @@noobster4779 Yeah because the NKVD would get fucked up by the army because all they are is personal while the army is the real fighting force
      He most likely didn’t know how many troops were coming into the city

    • @juliandasilva1001
      @juliandasilva1001 2 роки тому +3

      Dmitry Ustinov?

  • @ophthalmophobicnpc8002
    @ophthalmophobicnpc8002 Рік тому +1112

    Zhukov is what every man wants to be: fearless, badass, a war hero who is respected by everyone, with every soldier being willing to go through hell with you. And on top of that youre staging a coup against a sadistic mass murderer.

    • @charlesharper2357
      @charlesharper2357 Рік тому +43

      He was the only General who would stand up to Stalin...and one of the only ones he'd listen to.

    • @lajsin
      @lajsin 10 місяців тому +33

      ​@@charlesharper2357Rokossovsky did the same thing with during operation bagration and he made it alive as well.

    • @charlesharper2357
      @charlesharper2357 10 місяців тому +4

      @@lajsin
      Don't know where you got that from...Zhukov actually pushed for the two pronged approach.

    • @lajsin
      @lajsin 10 місяців тому

      Zhukov, like the rest of Stavka, supported idea of one massive breakthrough that could be exploited, meanwhile Rokossovsky solely advocated for breaking main advance into several coordinated groups. Stalin placed all bets on Rokossovskys plan. @@charlesharper2357

    • @user-tz1zo6nu3n
      @user-tz1zo6nu3n 5 місяців тому +1

      Stalin's idea of a war general was IIRC Budyonny - who was still advocating the effectiveness of mounted cavalry...

  • @norwegianboyee
    @norwegianboyee 10 місяців тому +142

    I love the confident NKVD guys rushing into the room taking about 0.2 seconds to immediately lose their confidence and start pissing their pants when they see multiple army guys with AK's directly staring at them.

    • @Exodon2020
      @Exodon2020 10 місяців тому +21

      They knew they lost. Had they been first to react the situation would have likely been reversed and many of the turncoats within the Politbureau would have been sided with Beria instead to save their own skin.

  • @JohnnysWarStories
    @JohnnysWarStories  3 роки тому +2848

    The portrayal of Zhukov kills me in this movie haha

    • @adamallen1097
      @adamallen1097 3 роки тому +178

      He was hilarious

    • @benedictodunsky2790
      @benedictodunsky2790 3 роки тому +282

      " Fock Me, Georgy eyes follows me in this room "

    • @blackpowderuser373
      @blackpowderuser373 3 роки тому +228

      "Alright, what's a war hero gotta do to get some LUBRICATION around here?!?"
      **

    • @guilhermegoncalves110
      @guilhermegoncalves110 3 роки тому +133

      0:43 - "Hands up or I shoot you in the fokin' face!"

    • @matthewcockburn9850
      @matthewcockburn9850 3 роки тому +117

      "Spit it out Georgy, stagin a coup here."
      That and when the NKVD soldiers take off, "go on, kill them will ya." 😂

  • @davidrendall7195
    @davidrendall7195 2 роки тому +3070

    Lovely little detail with the Army Guards beside the pillars. When Beria goes to the window he tells them to "Arrest that man, he's gone mad!" Neither move from their positions. Zhukov enters the room and when he sees Beria, he casually hands his rifle to the same guard that just blanked the most dangerous man in Russia. The power of command.

    • @asllen3310
      @asllen3310 2 роки тому +357

      Beria (and even some of us) doesn't realize that the guards he think is just a normal NKVD (his men), but if we look from a bit closer it's the real Red Army, probably being planned to be there by either Krushchev or Zhukov himself.

    • @kyleshea384
      @kyleshea384 2 роки тому +48

      @@asllen3310 Yeah if that were me I'd have my guys dress up as one of them

    • @tektoastium7241
      @tektoastium7241 2 роки тому +107

      @@asllen3310 actually, the NKVD have blue caps. The Red Army has olive green

    • @xhagast
      @xhagast 2 роки тому +28

      Don't forget the worthlessness of loyalty and the obviousness of Beria's fall.

    • @asllen3310
      @asllen3310 Рік тому +35

      @@tektoastium7241 yes that! the guards on the meeting room wore olive green caps! that the detail!

  • @kev3d
    @kev3d Рік тому +620

    2:46 For those that might not be aware, Molotov (Michael Palin) says he'll "spend a kopek" meaning to use the toilet. In British slang, "spend a penny" refers to the early days of public restrooms which charged a penny for their use to pay for their maintenance. A kopek is (or was) an Eastern European/Russian/Soviet coin, more or less analogous to a penny, or a European or American cent, worth 1/100th of the value of a Ruble.

    • @wowsuchhandle
      @wowsuchhandle Рік тому +14

      I always wondered how that meant using the bathroom. Thank you.

    • @robert100xx
      @robert100xx Рік тому +24

      Additional fun fact. The Actor playing Molotov is Micheal Palin. A British gentleman. I wonder if he ad-libbed this for laughs.

    • @Batchall_Accepted
      @Batchall_Accepted Рік тому +5

      This one made me laugh so hard, and how all the actors are using their native colloquialisms

    • @Tugela60
      @Tugela60 Рік тому +7

      In Russia public toilets were often manned by some attendant, usually some retired person, and you would have to pay them to use it.

    • @5roundsrapid263
      @5roundsrapid263 11 місяців тому +1

      @@JB-uu8khven American public toilets were often coin-operated until the ‘70s.

  • @aiiv7839
    @aiiv7839 Рік тому +349

    I love the part at 1:29 where Zhukov just casually orders that soldier to kill those NKVD men that walked in. It's just as casual as someone saying, "Get me some coffee, will ya?" and it's so hilarious to me.

    • @michaeldailey3219
      @michaeldailey3219 Рік тому +16

      Yes, I loved that part too.

    • @Uppernorwood976
      @Uppernorwood976 26 днів тому +1

      Hilarious, but also terrifying how everyone just accepts it.

    • @Nickname-ef9tv
      @Nickname-ef9tv 4 дні тому

      @@Uppernorwood976 : They were NKVD officers, them being free game if anything made a lot of people feel a lot safer.

  • @LTAD-xi6sw
    @LTAD-xi6sw 2 роки тому +2842

    4:06 “Stalin would be loving this”
    He absolutely would. The drama, the betrayal, the chaos. Just his sort of entertainment

    • @andrewcarlson3486
      @andrewcarlson3486 Рік тому +215

      Literally has popcorn while watching this whole thing in the afterlife

    • @joestevenson5568
      @joestevenson5568 Рік тому +241

      Also he despised Beria anyway. He was useful to him, but absolutely not someone he liked or trusted.

    • @FireMarshallStev
      @FireMarshallStev Рік тому +106

      I love how whimsically this line is delivered. Molotov didn't have many lines in the film, but this is a top one.

    • @WhyTho525
      @WhyTho525 Рік тому +21

      Stalin hated Beria, so ofc he would've loved this

    • @alphasilicon8720
      @alphasilicon8720 Рік тому +27

      @@WhyTho525Hell, Stalin didn’t even want Beria as head of the NKVD, (he wanted Georgy Malenkov as that) Beria was elected to the position by the Party.

  • @bigj1905
    @bigj1905 2 роки тому +3148

    Khrushchev snapping at Georgy was a real awesome moment.
    You can hear the anger and frustration in his voice when he points out all the innocent men who were framed or killed by Beria, and how it’s B.S and a waste of time to put such a man on trial.

    • @LoudaroundLincoln
      @LoudaroundLincoln 2 роки тому +5

      No. He just wanted it done quickly. It was always going to be a bullet and a bonfire. It's not the crimes he committed, it's how dangerous he was.

    • @jackakakreanxx5587
      @jackakakreanxx5587 2 роки тому +22

      Or he put on a really good act

    • @szellemikutmergezes9810
      @szellemikutmergezes9810 2 роки тому

      The most ironic about this is that they also werent innocent at all, thats the exact reason why they killed Beria, they didnt give a fuck about what he did they just wanted to silence him because he had info on all of them.

    • @mst3KGf
      @mst3KGf 2 роки тому +327

      None of the other Soviet leaders, including Khrushchev, are what we call "good" people as they all have blood on their hands, but they all have the "we did what we had to do" attitude for (a) the greater good or at least the lesser of two evils and (b) in order to survive under Stalin. None of them are proud of what they did. Beria, on the other hand, is a sadistic monster who openly revels in the pain and suffering he causes. Understandably, they're disgusted and horrified by such a man and would want him gone.

    • @SStupendous
      @SStupendous 2 роки тому +37

      @@mst3KGf Pretty sure Nazis had the same attitude? "Did what we were told/'had' to do". Doesn't make it right ultimately though.

  • @philipsalama8083
    @philipsalama8083 10 місяців тому +184

    I don't understand how the Russians could call this an "insulting" portrayal of Zhukov - everyone else, but not Zhukov. Zhukov is awesome in this movie. I'd love to be portrayed like this in a film.

    • @424dsfdsfdsfs
      @424dsfdsfdsfs 6 місяців тому

      Zhukov was a super aggressive power grabber, often claiming others results as his own, ready to kill to advance his interests. But Russian Proaganda hides that fact trying to present him as just an obedient general

    • @raideurng2508
      @raideurng2508 25 днів тому +3

      Because propaganda.

    • @Nickname-ef9tv
      @Nickname-ef9tv 8 днів тому +3

      The movie still makes fun of the USSR's political elite's inner workings. Putin's regime wants the Kremlin to be sacrosanct no matter what, not the target of sartire.

  • @shawnlam3109
    @shawnlam3109 Рік тому +45

    "GUARDS! GUAAARDS!"
    Camera: Zooms out to two guards.
    "You feel something?"

    • @pogcompagni
      @pogcompagni 16 днів тому +4

      "You hear something?"
      "Just the wind"

    • @thiagodeandrade7081
      @thiagodeandrade7081 6 днів тому

      @@pogcompagni To be fair, after Stalin's guards pretended, earlier in the movie, not having heard him falling inside his quarters to avoid trouble, I suspect it was standard practice.

    • @pogcompagni
      @pogcompagni 6 днів тому +1

      @@thiagodeandrade7081 true, everybody was afraid at time in the soviet union

    • @thiagodeandrade7081
      @thiagodeandrade7081 5 днів тому

      @@pogcompagni I think so.

  • @demon515
    @demon515 2 роки тому +8868

    I love how Zhukov is so fearless. Everyone else was afraid of Beria but him. Then again why would he be? He’s a war hero in charge of a giant army of men that would follow him through the gates of hell.

    • @JR7noir
      @JR7noir 2 роки тому +573

      Difference between an army and party.

    • @tyler89557
      @tyler89557 2 роки тому +1082

      In the words of Zhukov
      "I beat the entire German Army, I think I can handle a fleshbag in a waistcoat"

    • @user-ll2sd8bs4g
      @user-ll2sd8bs4g 2 роки тому +32

      @@tyler89557 ‘I focked Germany.’

    • @xalthzdornier4805
      @xalthzdornier4805 2 роки тому +414

      Even Stalin feared Zhukov.

    • @gregorylumban-gaol3889
      @gregorylumban-gaol3889 2 роки тому +373

      @@xalthzdornier4805 Stalin feared Beria as well
      But for reasons that would disgust even the most vicious dictators in history.

  • @swjdnansjdjs4224
    @swjdnansjdjs4224 3 роки тому +2621

    Notice how Georgy was on his side until he looked at all his crimes on that paper

    • @matthewriley7826
      @matthewriley7826 3 роки тому +300

      It’s pretty ambiguous. He didn’t head the trial when he had the power to do so but when he saw it he also didn’t do anything to save him.

    • @Z95HeadHunter
      @Z95HeadHunter 2 роки тому +296

      He was a bit of a coward. At least in the context of the movie. I think he was afraid of Beria's wrath should the tables be turned, but he also didn't want to incite the wrath of his other colleagues.

    • @RgyStvia
      @RgyStvia 2 роки тому +81

      Malenkov its a coward man
      He didn't do anything because he know if he try save Beria he will getting execute too

    • @Astartes-6969
      @Astartes-6969 2 роки тому +11

      That's a good detail.

    • @benjaminlucas1635
      @benjaminlucas1635 2 роки тому +58

      It's funny that Jeffrey Tambor can play all of these comical roles but when he's playing a serious character he still manages to make him somewhat comical playing someone who doesn't seem to have a clue.

  • @Zippsterman
    @Zippsterman Рік тому +85

    "You want a job done properly, call the army."
    Yeah that reputation has slipped a little

    • @jonathannathan1754
      @jonathannathan1754 18 днів тому +1

      Not the same army.

    • @Nickname-ef9tv
      @Nickname-ef9tv 8 днів тому

      No love for Russia's army, but relative to how a certain ex-KGB officer thinks wars should go they are still the competent ones. Relative.

    • @hannahdyson7129
      @hannahdyson7129 3 дні тому

      This movie was pre Ukraine. So ..

  • @mongorians22
    @mongorians22 8 місяців тому +38

    3:23 I love Steve Buscemi here, it's one of the best deliveries in the movie. When I first heard he was going to play Khrushchev I was skeptical but I'll be damned if he doesn't give perhaps the best performance in a movie absolutely stacked with top-class actors giving it their best.

  • @wedgeantilles3983
    @wedgeantilles3983 2 роки тому +1605

    "What about Tukhachevsky and Pyatakov!? Did they get a trial!? What about Sokolnikov, who BEGGED him to look after his elderly mother, and what did this monster do, he STRANGLED HER in front of him! It's TOO LATE. The only choice we have is between his death or his revenge. And you will FUCKING SIGN THIS." Absolutely 10/10 kino from Buscemi.

    • @CultureFiendMedia89
      @CultureFiendMedia89 2 роки тому +25

      Amen

    • @TheAzureNightmare
      @TheAzureNightmare 2 роки тому +13

      I can think of a Mr. Madison who'd be glad to have called THAT guy. Where's that ELO coming from?

    • @syahmiAimann
      @syahmiAimann 2 роки тому +127

      Poor tukhachevsky, the man who was first five original the marshal of soviet union along with voroshilov, got purged during Great Purge

    • @benrig89
      @benrig89 2 роки тому +61

      And he's completely correct too, Solzhenitsyn would approve.
      Though I feel like real life Khrushchev was probably not as moral as he is in this movie.

    • @coachman1532
      @coachman1532 2 роки тому +66

      I can’t think of a lot of things more evil than strangling someone’s mother after that person begged for her to get good care.

  • @huldrrrr9486
    @huldrrrr9486 3 роки тому +3512

    "Why'd they hang a picture of my grandmother in here?" *chuckles*
    "Stalin would have loved this"
    In a really dark way these parts are kind of wholesome, just some lads (who would kill each other without batting an eyelid) having a laugh and reminiscing

    • @gregorylumban-gaol3889
      @gregorylumban-gaol3889 3 роки тому +285

      Best part was that it was true. Stalin actually would have loved this. I think he would even walk alongside them with Beria begging Stalin for mercy. Perhaps Stalin would even have the pleasure of personally dragging Beria.

    • @s3c0nd1mpact
      @s3c0nd1mpact 3 роки тому +187

      Its the ultimate goal in life; having a dedicated group of lads apart of something much bigger than yourself. This kind of camaraderie and jeering makes these fifty year old Soviet dinosaurs seem like high school seniors.

    • @citus333
      @citus333 3 роки тому +125

      @@gregorylumban-gaol3889 And he would have. He really really wanted to kill beria for the longest time but what prevented him is Beria's Powerbase within the georgian Politiburo and his tight hold in the NKVD. Stalin on multiple occasion after the war had already decimated the Georgian Soviets in an effort to secure enough power to arrest Beria. He suceeded in destroying the georgians but it was not enough to secure Beria's Arrest.

    • @Igor9011998
      @Igor9011998 3 роки тому +116

      @@citus333 Stalin tolerated Beria because he used to get the job done... after the war when Beria was trying to centralize power around the NKVD by using the georgian mingrelian minority (of which beria belonged to), Stalin purged them all, im talking about a small scale genocide of an ethnic minority... needless to say that after this 'incident', beria never tried anything 'funny' again, not to mention that he, out of every other ministers, was TERRIFIED of Stalin, and Stalin surely loved to bully beria more than anyone else

    • @samtrotter7177
      @samtrotter7177 2 роки тому +5

      @@s3c0nd1mpact That's a really weird "ultimate goal in life"

  • @michaelgmitter1533
    @michaelgmitter1533 9 місяців тому +38

    I love Steve Buscemi as Nikita Khruschev way more than I thought I would. But Jason Isaacs as Zhukov carries every scene he is in.

    • @Nickname-ef9tv
      @Nickname-ef9tv 8 днів тому

      The movie is a prime example that an actor's performance weighs more than physical similarities to historical persons.

  • @Jaxymann
    @Jaxymann 11 місяців тому +140

    I love that Beria growls about “looking forward to peeling the skin off your face” to Zhukov, and yet he just mockingly says “not with that you won’t” whilst holding Lavrenti’s own knife. Beria was a cruel, terrifying monster who owned the KGB as his personal instruments of terror, but he threatened the man who marched from Moscow to Berlin slaughtering Nazis, and the one person in all of Russia who didn’t fear him: *Field Marshal Georgy Fucking Zhukov.*

    • @GabrielNicho
      @GabrielNicho 8 місяців тому +6

      The KGB didn't exist yet. It was founded the year after Berias death.

    • @michaellynes3540
      @michaellynes3540 5 місяців тому +6

      @@GabrielNichoBeria owned the MVD.

    • @Peter43John
      @Peter43John 2 місяці тому

      NKVD: the KGB was the successor

    • @michaellynes3540
      @michaellynes3540 2 місяці тому +1

      @@Peter43John The NKVD came first, then the MVD, then MGB, and then the KGB.

  • @sugandhakohli
    @sugandhakohli 3 роки тому +6688

    I absolutely love how Zukhov is personally leading the coup. Like literally. Wielding an AK, ahead of the group, looking out for any Beria supporters until the army arrives. Fucking badass!!

    • @leadkiss7262
      @leadkiss7262 3 роки тому +150

      Just like he said "I fucked the German army, I think I can take a fleshball in a suit"

    • @ImmortanDan
      @ImmortanDan 3 роки тому +238

      @@HelghastStalker Don't forget feared. In this movie his ability to provide the heavy army support is what carries the day, and it probably did in real life as well; People were right to be scared shitless of him.

    • @TheVoiceOfReason93
      @TheVoiceOfReason93 2 роки тому +36

      @James Hagan Actually no. The Bolsheviks were wary of any 'Napoleon' or 'Caesar' figures who could usurp the revolution and went far to keep a lid on the power of the army partly to prevent that. Apart from his outsider status and abrasive personality, Leon Trotsky was kicked out because of his role in forming the Red Army during the Russian Civil War, and many feared that he could use it to seize power. Zhukov would not be allowed anywhere near the Presidium - in fact, within a few years of Stalin's death and Khrushev seizing power Zhukov would be sidelined and forced to retire.

    • @AnnDroid877
      @AnnDroid877 2 роки тому +193

      I love Jason Isaacs' portrayal of Zhukov in this film. Zhukov's daughter claimed that she was appalled, that her father never used foul language, etc.

    • @Vollification
      @Vollification 2 роки тому +158

      Fun fact
      They had to reduce his number of medals for the movie because if they portrayed how many medals he actually had it would one, look insane and two Isaac wouldn't be able to do any form of "advanced" movement (such as running), he would basically be reduced to a slow walk :p

  • @Dan-kr9bm
    @Dan-kr9bm 3 роки тому +3402

    Georgy went from being head of government of the Soviet Union to being director of a powerplant in Kazachstan.

    • @ruturajshiralkar5566
      @ruturajshiralkar5566 3 роки тому +465

      Malenkov as the part of Anti-Party Group lead by Kaganovich tried to oust Khrushchev from his post as the Gen Sec. But Marshal Zhukov saved him.

    • @TheVoiceOfReason93
      @TheVoiceOfReason93 2 роки тому +677

      Normally, in Soviet politics, if you lose the power struggles the worse you get is getting demoted and shoved off to fill some backwater humiliating post, like becoming the ambassador of Mongolia (in the case of Molotov following the failed coup against Khrushev), or made to run a candlewax factory. Others just get retired early. The mass executions and the mass incarcerations in gulags were mostly a product of the Stalinist era and following it the Soviets actively moved away from such practices, even if they still do occur at a much reduced frequency and with far less lethality.

    • @Ea-Nasir_Copper_Co
      @Ea-Nasir_Copper_Co 2 роки тому +162

      @@TheVoiceOfReason93 They realized they were scaring off the best and brightest.

    • @krieger8825
      @krieger8825 2 роки тому +240

      That's kinda good, being head of a powerplant is kinda good for the time, it's better than starving to death or being tortured to death by the secret police

    • @jec1ny
      @jec1ny 2 роки тому +299

      Malenkov outlived them all. After his overthrow he was allowed to live and eventually settled into a quiet retirement in Moscow. In quite possibly the greatest irony in history, Malenkov converted to Orthodox Christianity before his death in 1988 at the age of 86. In his final years he was very active in church services. One wonders if he spent his time praying for the forgiveness of the millions of people he helped to kill.

  • @severin99
    @severin99 11 місяців тому +52

    I still just can't get over how good Michael Palin is in this film. Transcendently funny but with such heart. A wonderful performance

    • @lomax343
      @lomax343 2 місяці тому +1

      In 1939, the USSR invaded Finland. It didn't go too well for them at first: Red Army tanks were forced to stick to the roads, which were easily blocked. Meanwhile the Finns (all of whom learned to ski almost as soon as they learned to walk) made a devastating series of hit-and-run raids on stalled Soviet columns.
      In desperation, the Red Air Force started bombing Finnish cities. The world protested. Soviet foreign minster Molotov insisted that they weren't dropping bombs but emergency food supplies as Finnish civilians were starving.
      When Finnish troops heard this, they told the Soviets "Here are some cocktails to go with the food," and lobbed petrol bombs.
      Hence Molotov Cocktails.
      Yes, Michael Palin's performance was great - but Molotov was not a nice man. If he had a heart, it was a very strange one.

    • @severin99
      @severin99 2 місяці тому

      @@lomax343 yes, they were all horrible men. It’s not a documentary.

  • @Phlebas
    @Phlebas 2 роки тому +1393

    I really like the line, "It's too late. The only choice we have is between his death and his revenge." It's not a funny line, but it really brings home the point that they've crossed the Rubicon.

    • @TheBadgerr
      @TheBadgerr Рік тому +21

      Underrated comment

    • @brianjones7660
      @brianjones7660 Рік тому +3

      brilliant writing....the backbone of any great movie you really liked....

    • @richardcoughlin8931
      @richardcoughlin8931 Рік тому +10

      Fast forward to June 24, 2023. Russia is a timeless mess.

    • @prebenjaeger
      @prebenjaeger Рік тому

      @@richardcoughlin8931 It is? Moscow looks fine, Paris is burning.

    • @clusterflick6333
      @clusterflick6333 11 місяців тому +18

      ​@@prebenjaeger Parisians rioting and setting the city on fire is pretty standard status quo stuff for France, tbh. In other countries, that might show signs of a crisis, in France it's just your run-of-the-mill Friday afternoon.

  • @plateshutoverlock
    @plateshutoverlock 3 роки тому +1716

    I love how the window required a key to open that he didn't have, and it was double paned to soundproof it.

    • @TheSuspectOnFoot
      @TheSuspectOnFoot 3 роки тому +246

      In cold climates like Russia, windows are typically always double-paned so the heat doesn't escape so easily. They aren't specifically soundproofed

    • @deadstareffect
      @deadstareffect 3 роки тому +94

      @@TheSuspectOnFoot just conveniently soundproofed

    • @animo9050
      @animo9050 3 роки тому +83

      @@deadstareffect to be fair, lots of things are conveniently sound proof because of how sound works, when trying to keep something in or something.

    • @deadstareffect
      @deadstareffect 3 роки тому +4

      @@animo9050 neat

    • @Nathan-yw3rg
      @Nathan-yw3rg 2 роки тому +42

      I have lived in Kazakhstan where many buildings are designed and built in Soviet style and I can assure you most of their walls and windows are soundproof especially the "Stalinka" buildings

  • @mclaughlinja1995
    @mclaughlinja1995 Рік тому +39

    “Not with that you won’t” (holding his knife) kills me every time. The perfect response to Beria’s threat to peel the skin from his face. 😂

  • @HamburgerTime209
    @HamburgerTime209 Рік тому +21

    I love the detail of Zhukov taking off Beria’s belt, as this was a common way of preventing the escape of recently surrendered prisoners of war during WW2, a practice he’d be familiar with.

  • @KillerBot5100
    @KillerBot5100 2 роки тому +589

    “Spit it out Georgy, staging a coup here” Zhukov knew exactly what he was doing and how much of a crime it was if it didn’t work out, but he knew Beria was so despised that barely anyone would lift a finger to stop him.

    • @SmartassX1
      @SmartassX1 Рік тому +33

      Back then it was believed by many that Zhukov could probably have used his hero status to seize power for himself. Stalin believed this too and was worried.

    • @alexf9381
      @alexf9381 Рік тому +38

      ​@@SmartassX1 Yep. Zhukov was adored by virtually everyone. The army, citizens etc. That's why Stalin knew he couldn't lay a finger on him regardless how jealous he was. Stalins jealousy was worsened by the fact he wasn't Russian so he always felt like an outsider. So an actual Russian like Zhukov who was deemed a hero by the nation was his worst nightmare.

  • @Turboy65
    @Turboy65 2 роки тому +631

    The two men who walked in at the wrong moment should have looked at Zhukov and said "We're with you." and stayed so as to avoid getting shot. They chose badly.

    • @hindolbhattacharya9715
      @hindolbhattacharya9715 2 роки тому +175

      Not every NKVD personnel was killed (surrendered NKVD soldiers were just disarmed when the army reinforcement arrives). They were higher ups and had close ties with Beria. Unlikely that they would have been spared.

    • @worldwidewendall6181
      @worldwidewendall6181 2 роки тому +116

      One of them is the man that Zhukov degrades when he first enters. He feminizes him saying 'stick you in a skirt' etc. The guy was part of the hated NKVD. Zhukov was probably always going to have him killed. He established dominance in his first words to him.

    • @Patrick_3751
      @Patrick_3751 2 роки тому +113

      Fun fact, in real life two MVD guards DID walk in and stumbled across the coup! One of the generals immediately put them in touch with Bulganin over the phone who SOMEHOW managed to convince them to leave and not say anything! God what I would give to hear that conversation! (Translated of course) LOL!!!

    • @cadenvanvalkenburg6718
      @cadenvanvalkenburg6718 Рік тому +11

      One of those was Beria's assistant in the movie. He was always dead

    • @Tugela60
      @Tugela60 Рік тому +3

      ​@@Patrick_3751 The conversation would have been "you can go now and be quite, or, you can stay and go to a gulag". I am sure they were not stupid and knew what was going on, so they just did as they were told to do.

  • @sapr76
    @sapr76 Рік тому +17

    "Spit it out Georgie! Staging a coup here!" LMFO! Jason Isaacs is brilliant.

  • @zamnodorszk7898
    @zamnodorszk7898 Рік тому +52

    “Speak up, Georgey, staging a coup are you?”
    Is the most hilarious line from Zhukov in this.

  • @SpartanSniper3
    @SpartanSniper3 2 роки тому +5065

    This moment is just as gratifying as the death of Stalin, but the world at large overlooks it because Beria was overshadowed by Stalin. This man was an absolute monster and the only objection you're likely to ever find to his death is that it was too quick.

    • @Saurophaganax1931
      @Saurophaganax1931 2 роки тому +15

      You could kill him a thousand times over, in a thousand different ways, and it still wouldn’t be justice enough for everything he did.

    • @zephyr8072
      @zephyr8072 2 роки тому +346

      It is however vastly amusing that in reality apparently his last words were “Allow me to say..” before being shot.
      Clearly, he wasn’t allowed.

    • @DinsRune
      @DinsRune 2 роки тому +233

      Look at it this way: Beria is forgotten by the world at large, considered a footnote in the stories of other men. What greater indignity is there then for a powerful man to be forgotten?

    • @deanpd3402
      @deanpd3402 2 роки тому +131

      We know the ins and outs of Hitler. We know what he ate in the trenches. We know what he read in jail. We know everything there is to know about the man but ask your average college student about Beria and they wouldn't even know how to say his name. While it might be justice that he is forgotten, the world needs to know about this murderous history as much as they need to know about Hitler's brutal regime.

    • @ElPresidente_2087
      @ElPresidente_2087 2 роки тому +28

      @@deanpd3402 if people wanna talk about Stalin they should also talk about Beria

  • @LordValorum
    @LordValorum 3 роки тому +943

    Fun fact: Zhukov was 56 years old when Coup happened.

    • @xalthzdornier4805
      @xalthzdornier4805 2 роки тому +71

      He was a young high ranking lad then.

    • @LoudaroundLincoln
      @LoudaroundLincoln 2 роки тому +48

      @@xalthzdornier4805 well from what I gather the second world war gave lots of advancement opportunities. Between the German army and the NKVD, positions of power were always becoming available.

    • @nosferatuoddz7974
      @nosferatuoddz7974 2 роки тому +2

      Ok

    • @Prauwlet213
      @Prauwlet213 Рік тому +5

      Woah. That’s very young for a general

    • @SmartassX1
      @SmartassX1 Рік тому +14

      @@Prauwlet213 Marshal, actually. That's higher than general. In modern times that rank nolonger exists, because no army is big enough to need it and because someone decided to make it fashionable that a civilian president should be the highest commander.
      Also, the reason why russia had relatively young officers during and after WW2 was that shortly before the war, Stalin had purged the military and had all senior staff killed.

  • @kkonacreed8638
    @kkonacreed8638 7 місяців тому +14

    “Want a job done properly, call the army”😂😂😂I love this movie

  • @anacondafilms
    @anacondafilms Рік тому +11

    Fun fact: zukovs medals in the movie were less and smaller because they couldnt put all of his medals to the uniform

  • @95DarkFire
    @95DarkFire 3 роки тому +288

    4:31 Malenkov ordering his own picture removed is a nice detail.

    • @gtbest5417
      @gtbest5417 3 роки тому +14

      Context?

    • @blackpowderuser373
      @blackpowderuser373 3 роки тому +75

      @@gtbest5417 Pretty much acknowledging that Khrushchev is now calling the shots

    • @Joao-jx1lo
      @Joao-jx1lo 2 роки тому +54

      @@blackpowderuser373 i think thats too because he fins the portrait extremely ugly hahahah. Its a Two way joke.

    • @BacenticFlam
      @BacenticFlam 2 роки тому +14

      @@Joao-jx1lo He said that he wanted the portrait with his chin up to be destroyed

    • @Darkfawfulx
      @Darkfawfulx 2 роки тому

      Was this one of those deleted scenes?

  • @joshuawebb5891
    @joshuawebb5891 3 роки тому +2885

    Two things come to mind ..
    1. I think the scene under plays just how much of a balsy move this was . If any of the committee wussed out , beria could have gotten away then they really would all be dead . Beria was a monster who loved to do.the torture himself .
    2. Making Malenkov sign it in front of everyone cemented Khrushchev's authority . He may have been a progressive , but he knew what he was doing .
    Edit : No one from the top down liked Beria. Stalin at best tolerated him , and Zhukov was literally itching for an excuse to drag him out by his collar .

    • @Saurophaganax1931
      @Saurophaganax1931 3 роки тому +199

      I want to say that he got what he deserved in the end but he really didn’t. I don’t think there is a punishment in existence capable of avenging every thing this man did. Anything you could possibly do to him would just fall short.

    • @robertwalker5794
      @robertwalker5794 3 роки тому +98

      @@Saurophaganax1931 Don’t worry. Satan himself no doubt greeted him in Hell the day he died.

    • @Chad-Rainis
      @Chad-Rainis 2 роки тому +17

      @@robertwalker5794 nah, I think Beria got a place as Satan's Right Hand Man.

    • @michaellynes3540
      @michaellynes3540 2 роки тому +20

      @@Saurophaganax1931 Lavrentiy Beria was a total psychopath. He locked up half of the Soviet Union, tortured, raped and killed hundreds of thousands of people. Stalin even feared Beria and his notorious reputation of rape, but kept Beria protected. After Stalin died, all of Beria's crimes, Beria feared, could be used as an asset. Beria issued reforms in the Soviet Union mainly to distance himself from Stalin's regime and the crimes Beria committed.

    • @alienvseditor
      @alienvseditor 2 роки тому +84

      Stalin made a point to his daughter that she under any circumstances should never be in a room alone with Beria

  • @materialdialectics
    @materialdialectics Рік тому +22

    So who else felt the need to come back and watch this today?

    • @CMY187
      @CMY187 Рік тому +1

      Yup.
      Prigozhin was an idiot.
      This is why all coups should start with you IMMEDIATELY securing the ruling office/building. Grab the heads of state, lock them up somewhere, and make sure they can’t send messages or make announcements without you standing off to the side pointing a gun or crossbow at them.
      Prigozhin didn’t have anyone in the Kremlin who was willing to act on his behalf.

  • @DieNextInLINE
    @DieNextInLINE Рік тому +11

    I love that during a COUP, Molotov is still somehow sticking to 'the rules of the party' with his "This is an ad-hoc motion!"

  • @dignam8943
    @dignam8943 2 роки тому +1951

    Steve Buscemi is so good in these type of roles. His antiheroes are never over the top and feel kind of relatable and human - even if they are amoral and corrupt. Exactly this is why I will always prefer his work as Nucky on Boardwalk Empire over antiheroes like Walter White. He delivers nuanced performances which are much more suble and complex.

    • @benrig89
      @benrig89 2 роки тому +87

      If you had told me Steve Buscemi would play Nikita Khrushchev and pull it off really well, I would have laughed at you. Until I saw this movie.

    • @som-wanmaybea3682
      @som-wanmaybea3682 Рік тому +41

      It's the key this whole movie stands on. You recognize your working class uncle and your flimsy middle manager and your eccentric middle school pal in these people. There was something unusually ruthless and opportunistic about them... but it's amazing how much it disappears in their average-ness.

    • @Terribads
      @Terribads Рік тому

      I think he would have done a great Beria, but this was a comedy.. twisted, but comedy

    • @followingtheroe1952
      @followingtheroe1952 Рік тому +1

      Well i would give my life for the motherland!

    • @clay3205
      @clay3205 Рік тому

      Nucky was a great character/anti-hero that I was so very happy to see get blasted in the face. Like Tony Soprano, his own actions and inactions led him to him rightly deserved demise.

  • @raymondyee2008
    @raymondyee2008 3 роки тому +681

    Strange things do happen after the passing of Stalin.

    • @NoTraceOfSense
      @NoTraceOfSense 3 роки тому +3

      Is that a Saori cosplay?

    • @brandonlyon730
      @brandonlyon730 3 роки тому +29

      Things were just as crazy after Vladimir Lenin’s death, with Stalin and Trotsky.

    • @Oof-th5hz
      @Oof-th5hz 2 роки тому +2

      Nice pfp bro

    • @adjeiboateng6720
      @adjeiboateng6720 Рік тому

      @@brandonlyon730 Trotsky's alienation didn't help him

  • @soffa93
    @soffa93 Рік тому +7

    the switch from beria screaming at the top of his lungs and bashing the window to the gentle tapping outside slays me

  • @Charlie-ju7gf
    @Charlie-ju7gf Рік тому +15

    I think this is one of the best movies of all time: Inspired directorship, cinematography, sound design, acting, actor selection etc. It seems so low key but does everything right. More please.

    • @FloraWest
      @FloraWest Рік тому

      If you haven't seen "In The Loop" yet, it's the same creator and if you loved this, you will love that as well.

    • @Charlie-ju7gf
      @Charlie-ju7gf Рік тому +1

      @@FloraWest Thanks. I'll watch it.

  • @arkwill14
    @arkwill14 2 роки тому +169

    0:27 - It's when Beria first hears about the "button" that he knows a coup is actually underway and he's seriously in danger. Great acting from Simon Russell Beale.

  • @Southern_Crusader
    @Southern_Crusader 3 роки тому +1176

    I love how those military guards just stood their like they didn’t care. They just stood there and followed orders when it was given to them. They were like Russian versions of the British Royal Guards!

    • @user-ot7wh6mh7n
      @user-ot7wh6mh7n 3 роки тому +154

      Their job is simple. Follow orders of whoever in charge without questioning. Not get mixed up in political games on their own

    • @matthewriley7826
      @matthewriley7826 3 роки тому +97

      Most likely they were in on it. Zhukov probably deliberately placed them there while Beria had the NKVD find scapegoats for the massacre.

    • @galshaine2018
      @galshaine2018 3 роки тому +56

      Well... It's not a direct enemy attack but very clearly a coup. In totalitarian regimes people quite often prefer to be passive. During the 1991 coup against Gorbachev the army was also confused and preferred not to take action, which helped the coups collapse.

    • @declangaming24
      @declangaming24 Рік тому +2

      The guards guarding where relived

    • @atlantiswolf
      @atlantiswolf Рік тому +7

      @@galshaine2018 Well I saw this in a different comment section in this video, Beria had the loyalty of the NKVD, who wore blue caps, like you can see outside the building, but the ones in the room wore olive caps, denoting them as members of the Red Army, and likely under the command of Zhukov. So they probably knew what their job was before the coup took place.

  • @AshBloodfire
    @AshBloodfire Рік тому +15

    I think what really gets me is what this demonstrates. Everyone's terrified of Beria. He's an absolute monster with a list of atrocities as long as his arm, and longer. But Beria has no ACTUAL power. He can't crush skulls with his hands, or melt faces with his mind, or get shot and ignore it, or do more than just what one man with a weapon could do. All his power relies on others, the men he can order to do stuff, to strip away any other person's ability to defend themselves, so he can murder and torture and rape. The moment someone else does that trick (which ain't exclusive to him) better, he's reduced to an impotent, screaming child who dies just as easily as any other man.
    That's what societies get brain-warped to forget. In the end, they're just one sack of meat and water, little different from ourselves. The harm they can do is based solely on what they can get others to do. And you get further with mass unit than smaller groups who follow orders out of fear or a desire to break stuff. The downside, of course, is 'who and how many are going to have to suffer and die to invoke that fact'...but it's always inevitable. Like it's said. His death or his revenge.
    Also, I suspect, one way or another, this will be Putin's fate.

  • @grovercleavland2698
    @grovercleavland2698 Місяць тому +2

    I love how nonchalantly General Zhukov (Jason Isaacs) says things in this movie.

  • @Warmaker01
    @Warmaker01 2 роки тому +331

    0:42 So hilarious when Zhukov enters with an AK, Kruschev stands up, begins to raise his hands, but first points to Beria, then proceeds to cover his ears expecting gunfire!
    The added comedy of the NKVD barging in to see what was going on, only to see Zhukov and Red Army soldiers there, armed, and then try to run from the situation.
    Beria & Yezhov's NKVD had torture and execution rooms made with inclined floors so that blood would easily run down into drains.
    Beria got off easy for his execution.

    • @Riku-zv5dk
      @Riku-zv5dk 2 роки тому +41

      The funnier part is, if you pay attention to the NKVD guards, is they aren't investigating what is happening, they're bringing in snacks. There are four of them and one of the ones in the back is holding a tray with food on it. Apparently irl a couple of MVD, the successor tot he NKVD, did walk in on the coup but were talked into being quiet.

    • @Warmaker01
      @Warmaker01 Рік тому +24

      @@Riku-zv5dk You're absolutely correct, it makes it even more funny.
      "I'm just bringing in snacks but I see the Red Army here with AK-47s"

    • @LordZontar
      @LordZontar Рік тому

      "You. Go and kill them."

    • @michaellynes3540
      @michaellynes3540 5 місяців тому +1

      But Beria begged for the same mercy his victims begged for.

  • @oolooo
    @oolooo 3 роки тому +277

    Historically , Malenkov did press the button

    • @yomer355
      @yomer355 2 роки тому +111

      That's what they wrote down afterwards, yes. That's why this satire works, you can't be sure it wasn't really like that, since everything was documented in the "right" way.

    • @JR7noir
      @JR7noir 2 роки тому +2

      @@yomer355 bizarre.

    • @jennbaker6964
      @jennbaker6964 2 роки тому +7

      @@yomer355 exactly

    • @michaellynes3540
      @michaellynes3540 2 роки тому +76

      What happened was when Khrushchev loudly denounced Beria as an anti-communist and a western collaborator, the presidium erupted in rage. And before the votes were casted, Malenkov panicked, pressing the button under his desk.

    • @ajaysidhu471
      @ajaysidhu471 Рік тому

      @@michaellynes3540 and where did you find that information? Nikita Khrushchev lied during the infamous de-Stalinisation speech

  • @timmeinschein9007
    @timmeinschein9007 Рік тому +9

    I almost LOL when Beria was demanding the rights he refused to give to his innumerable victims!

  • @dashfatbastard
    @dashfatbastard Рік тому +8

    This is an ENOURMOUSLY underrated film. It's worth seeing for the cast alone.

  • @GrandHighGamer
    @GrandHighGamer Рік тому +565

    Jason Isaacs absolutely kills in this movie as a Yorkshire Russian military general. "Not with that you won't."
    Also I always feel bad for the guards who walk into the room, realise shit is going down, and hastily try and back out again.

    • @MacTac141
      @MacTac141 Рік тому +2

      I felt bad too until realizing they were high ranking NKVD members. Basically these guys were the SS of the USSR so purging the higher ranks is absolutely a good thing, these men were awful human beings and deserved to die!

    • @HansenDing
      @HansenDing Рік тому +81

      Those weren't just guards tho, they were NKVD. Many in the Red Army would have (rightfully) pretty big grudges against the NKVD

    • @jeffersonwright9275
      @jeffersonwright9275 Рік тому +32

      ´´Sorry comrades .... wrong room!´´ Classic!!

    • @RaynmanPlays
      @RaynmanPlays Рік тому +11

      They might have survived if they had surrendered their weapons and stayed as a sign of approval.

    • @homersimpson5497
      @homersimpson5497 Рік тому +48

      The guy who hides and gets shot is Beria’s right hand man, and he’s just as much of a scumbag. Seems the others get away

  • @mbaxter22
    @mbaxter22 3 роки тому +220

    Such a satisfying scene. I like how Kruschev reverts back to Nucky Thompson for a minute when he gets Melonkov to sign the execution order.

  • @whateverthisis389
    @whateverthisis389 10 місяців тому +10

    That comment about Tukhachevsky is just golden.
    For Context, Mikhail Tukhachevsky was one of the first 5 Marshals of the Soviet Union, and was the one to set in motion the first Red Army reforms and pioneered the Deep Battle Doctrine, both would extensively help Zhukov and his peers down the line. He also had grievances with Stalin, as back when Stalin was still a Cavalry Commander, he refused orders to assist Tukhachevsky in taking Warsaw. This would lead to him being executed by the NKVD in 1937.
    But I would like to add that Tukhachevsky was frankly just as cruel, if not crueler than Stalin, or even Yezhov, Beria's predecessor. He would use Artillery on rebels in Kronstadt, and sent men across the ice to die to enemy fire or his own machine guns. Once the rebels surrendered, he disregarded his promise of a pardon and executed them all. During the Tambov Rebellion, he even used chemical weapons.

    • @Potentate_
      @Potentate_ 2 місяці тому +3

      I wouldn't go that far, Tukhachevsky was a brutal man and very militaristic, but I don't think he got any enjoyment from watching men die. He was just desensitized to it, he was more interested in women than any sort of edgy death streak.

    • @warmike
      @warmike Місяць тому +1

      Beria had nothing to do with his death though. When Beria came to power, Tukhachevsky had already been dead for more than a year.

  • @slickmechanical
    @slickmechanical Рік тому +5

    I love this section of the film. It's action action frantic action right up until Beria eats a bullet and then it let's off and everyone, including the audience breaths a sigh of relief. It's brilliant cinema.

  • @tsarbombawithinternetconne875
    @tsarbombawithinternetconne875 3 роки тому +497

    Beria looking like a idiot calling his guards is the funniest shit I’ve ever seen

    • @johnmartin4119
      @johnmartin4119 2 роки тому +46

      Even Zhukov looked annoyed at that sight

    • @Ramboost007
      @Ramboost007 2 роки тому +26

      That zoom out to the guards who couldn't hear him is an underrated funny moment

  • @bendrenth441
    @bendrenth441 3 роки тому +524

    So the blue hats are NKVD and the greenish hats are Red Army.

    • @spartangaming1352
      @spartangaming1352 3 роки тому +94

      lads with blue shoulder boards, gorget patches and caps with red trimming and blue covers are NKVD (technically should be MVD), the army drab ones with red trimming, red gorget patches and shoulder boards are Army

    • @bernardomiranda7257
      @bernardomiranda7257 3 роки тому +3

      @@spartangaming1352 nkgb

    • @LordValorum
      @LordValorum 3 роки тому +4

      Da (Yes in Russian)

    • @CodaMission
      @CodaMission 2 роки тому +24

      The NKVD was a state security bureau that operated as Stalin's secret police. Basically political crimes that threatened his power. Their name, like many shadowy Soviet government names, was euphemistic and unassuming. "People's Bureau for Internal Affairs". Despite their uniform being similar, they were not military. They reported to the Ministry for Internal Affairs, not Defence

    • @johnjones_1501
      @johnjones_1501 2 роки тому +10

      @@CodaMission They also had their own army, and even their own navy. Though the later was more of a Russian version of the coast guard, and I think their "army" was designated as a border guard.

  • @DavidRamos-no4lh
    @DavidRamos-no4lh Рік тому +20

    Prigozhin Vs Putin

    • @seanjenkins6947
      @seanjenkins6947 Рік тому +3

      Came here for these comments

    • @khanhdinh5650
      @khanhdinh5650 Рік тому +1

      The funny thing about Rus/Sov politics. One can be any character and you'd still get the same traits

    • @markoprskalo6127
      @markoprskalo6127 4 місяці тому

      Then I can portrait Brezhnev
      I look exactly like his young version

  • @RalphBrooker-gn9iv
    @RalphBrooker-gn9iv 7 місяців тому +4

    Outstanding film from start to finish. The entire film is its own highlights package. What struck me is how Steve Buscemi can switch from comedy to drama in a scene. But the cast is just beautiful. The appearance of Jason Isaacs’ Zhukov seemed to shift the narrative to top gear.
    ⭐️ ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

  • @Groundsey
    @Groundsey 2 роки тому +459

    Tuckachevsky, who Khrushchev mentions to Malenkov, was a Soviet Red Army General and Armoured Warfare theorist who was killed during the Red Army purges.

    • @morepower1415
      @morepower1415 2 роки тому +27

      He was a brilliant General same as Zhukov, if Zhukov was on the list of purges well USSR is good as dead by the German Reich

    • @zachhoward9099
      @zachhoward9099 2 роки тому +94

      Had Marshal Tuckachevsky actually been listened to by Stalin and the Soviet military industrial complex moved to make more tanks to correspond with his brilliant work on armored warfare, the Germans could’ve quite possibly been stopped well short of where they advanced to in reality and quite possibly millions of lives could have been saved

    • @morepower1415
      @morepower1415 2 роки тому +13

      @@zachhoward9099 With Zhukov and Tuckachevsky together, they could even do more damage to the Germans
      But if Kulik and Budyonny together? These 2 dumbass can do more damage to their own armies

    • @pyromania1018
      @pyromania1018 2 роки тому +90

      His torture was so brutal that there were blood stains on the confession paper they made him sign. Zhukov pays homage to him and his ingenious theories in his memoirs, though he, for understandable reasons, didn't mention the purge.

    • @gregorylumban-gaol3889
      @gregorylumban-gaol3889 2 роки тому +2

      @@morepower1415 Well no. Not really a great tactician if you look at his records. His opponents were mostly inferior to his army and it usually took him two attempts to defeat them. Out of all the Generals that was purged, only he actually fought his way up in the wars and even then, his record is average at best. You could say Stalin was purging some Generals who were incompetent in their jobs.
      Zhukov was a far superior commander and he didn’t need Tuckachevsky. I don’t think there’s any doubt that if Tuckachevsky lived, the Germans would easily steamroll the army he commands.

  • @sleeming88
    @sleeming88 Рік тому +171

    0:48 I love the way that Zhukov forcefully marches over to Beria like an angry parent going to discipline a misbehaving child 😂

  • @harrisonshone7769
    @harrisonshone7769 Рік тому +14

    This video is going to receive a surge in viewership on June 23/24, 2023.

  • @dr.muffine5470
    @dr.muffine5470 Рік тому

    I love the way the music picks up after the 1st shot like they're really going through with it

  • @f-14btomcat
    @f-14btomcat 3 роки тому +383

    Zhukov speaking with a British accent is freaking amazing.

    • @javierpatag3609
      @javierpatag3609 2 роки тому +39

      That's awesome, but I also like Khrushchev talking like a mobster from New Jersey.

    • @benrig89
      @benrig89 2 роки тому +21

      I can't recall where I saw it but I heard that they gave him a Yorkshire accent to make it clear he was a 'man of the people' and that he didn't take any shit.

    • @benrig89
      @benrig89 2 роки тому +27

      @@javierpatag3609 I saw an interview with the production where they said they deliberately chose the accents of the mains to match their character. Zhukov was Yorkshire, indicating he was a common man who didn't take any shit, Beria was Cockney indicating he was shiftless and untrustworthy (don't yell at me, that's just the stereotype) and Khrushchev was classic Brooklyn, indicating he was clever, resourceful and likely to survive the purges.

    • @mst3KGf
      @mst3KGf 2 роки тому +15

      @@benrig89 Yes and Stalin has a Cockney accent due to his background as a poor Georgian peasant.

    • @njd2342
      @njd2342 Рік тому +3

      @@benrig89 A Brummie accent would have been funnier.

  • @John-rn1nm
    @John-rn1nm 3 роки тому +612

    Just because it's politically motivated does not mean the accusations aren't true. 😏🤷‍♂️

    • @longyu9336
      @longyu9336 3 роки тому +77

      The rape cases were likely factual

    • @John-rn1nm
      @John-rn1nm 3 роки тому +110

      @@longyu9336 Stalin himself was very wary of Beria.

    • @str2010
      @str2010 3 роки тому +111

      @@John-rn1nm yeah, when he heard beria was with his daughter, he immediately sent the nkvd to get her back

    • @s3c0nd1mpact
      @s3c0nd1mpact 3 роки тому +4

      Tell that to Matt Gaetz.

    • @tcgvids5071
      @tcgvids5071 3 роки тому +1

      John Vincent Olmos, i like your logo

  • @Silopriest
    @Silopriest Рік тому +19

    Can't wait for the sequel.

    • @amandeepgill5206
      @amandeepgill5206 12 днів тому

      The Death of Kennedy where it's the KGB and CIA are teaming up to find the assassins

    • @piercebrosnan9528
      @piercebrosnan9528 10 днів тому

      @@amandeepgill5206 You mean Mossad and the CIA

    • @TheDoctorFromArknights
      @TheDoctorFromArknights 4 дні тому

      ​@@amandeepgill5206
      "Right, who the fuck killed Kennedy?"
      "It was not us that's for sure, Kruschev had us under strict orders not to meddle with American Politics."
      "Yeah yeah we know it wasn't you!"
      "Wait how did you know then?!"
      "Doesn't matter, I think we have someone we can talk to about this."
      "Anderson! Being 'The Spook' in!"
      *_Cue entrance of Mitchell Werbell III_*
      *__*

  • @Venislovas
    @Venislovas Рік тому +10

    Beria was such unbelievable monster that this movie toned him down.

  • @wernervon5508
    @wernervon5508 3 роки тому +353

    Beria: guards! guards!!
    Zhukov: oi

    • @Thanasis_Koligliatis
      @Thanasis_Koligliatis 3 роки тому +9

      At 0:48

    • @joncarr1200
      @joncarr1200 3 роки тому +4

      👊🤜😵🤕

    • @michaellynes3540
      @michaellynes3540 3 роки тому +8

      Zhukov: Spill it out Georgy, we're staging a coup here.
      Malenkov: He's got a knife by his ankle.

    • @joncarr1200
      @joncarr1200 3 роки тому +1

      @@michaellynes3540 Beria: You're a disgrace!! 😡

    • @joncarr1200
      @joncarr1200 3 роки тому +2

      @Muff Noudmiseni what did that have to do with anything?

  • @johnmartin4119
    @johnmartin4119 2 роки тому +389

    0:48 I love how disappointed and annoyed Zhukov looks when he sees Beria trying to run away like a Bit€h instead of staying to fight and die like a man. He even puts down his AK-47 cause he knows he won’t need it

    • @knivez786
      @knivez786 2 роки тому +38

      the double punch is what had me laughing
      the way Beria head rocked back from the impact of the punch
      😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @mst3KGf
      @mst3KGf 2 роки тому +24

      Also later on when Beria gets executed by a shot to the head, he gives the soldier who did it a look that screams, "Hey, I wanted to do that!"

    • @twisted_nether373
      @twisted_nether373 Рік тому

      So if you were about to die, you'd just give up and take the bullet? Sounds like what a bitch would do. Men usually prefer to survive.

  • @andrewdias478
    @andrewdias478 Рік тому +5

    Love this movie. All the performances are great. The director told the actors to use their natural accents because he thought it would help the actors focus more on performing their character rather than just the accents.

  • @brett103
    @brett103 Рік тому +10

    I remember the first time I read the entire story of Beria’s downfall. Never has karma been sweeter. A monster who committed the worst crimes imaginable against women and children; crying and begging for his life knowing there was nothing he could do to save himself before he was rightfully executed.

  • @schimmelfennig726
    @schimmelfennig726 3 роки тому +222

    "I have been pitching this moment every day for the last three decades." ^^

    • @antred11
      @antred11 2 роки тому +2

      *picturing

    • @jennbaker6964
      @jennbaker6964 2 роки тому +2

      says the dude who did nothing to make it happen

  • @adamfaturrachman8957
    @adamfaturrachman8957 3 роки тому +190

    "what button...?"
    I mean, he's a Minister of Defense and supporting the coup but he doesn't know the detail of their own plan 😅

    • @Ghostkilla773
      @Ghostkilla773 3 роки тому +25

      He wasn't technically in on the coup

    • @uusilm3245
      @uusilm3245 2 роки тому

      afraid

    • @zealord9399
      @zealord9399 2 роки тому +4

      @@Ghostkilla773 I watch the movie and I think he in on the coup and support it but did not know the planned of the coup

    • @ANWRocketMan
      @ANWRocketMan 2 роки тому +14

      In reality Malenkov pressed the button himself, apparantly after Beria questioned him on what was going on.

  • @sajithudayanga6503
    @sajithudayanga6503 Рік тому +11

    The most beautiful moment of entire post ww2 history of USSR.

  • @imiltiades332
    @imiltiades332 Рік тому +17

    Moscow 2023 colorized

  • @DisapprovingPigeon
    @DisapprovingPigeon 3 роки тому +824

    "Staging a coup here"
    Strangely relevant.

    • @nervesconcord
      @nervesconcord 3 роки тому +72

      60 or so idiots smearing shit on a wall, nicking a podium and leaving when they got bored is hardly what I would call a vigorous attempt at a coup or subverting democracy. The six city blocks in Seattle last June that were taken over for a month by a figure as high as 10,000 on some days, that could definitely be considered an insurrection aimed at subverting democracy, but I doubt anyone who liked the above comment could refrain from performing the mental gymnastics required to disagree with me.

    • @kubikkuratko188
      @kubikkuratko188 3 роки тому +22

      @@nervesconcord at first read i didnt understand what you meant then i realized you were talking about the raid on the white house not the coup in the burma which i thought prior comment meant.

    • @trenttrip6205
      @trenttrip6205 3 роки тому +1

      @@kubikkuratko188 hahahahahaha

    • @MaxwellAerialPhotography
      @MaxwellAerialPhotography 3 роки тому +6

      Not really, stop being a drama Queen.

    • @DisapprovingPigeon
      @DisapprovingPigeon 3 роки тому +2

      @@nervesconcord Well I don't think anyone believed it to be an actual "coup". I just thought that it was funny I found the video in my recommended feed just as I got home from work one night and read what was happening at the Capitol at the time, and I made an off-hand comment just before going to bed not really thinking anyone would care but clearly I was wrong. For the record, I know it wasn't a coup, your explanation or whatever was unnecessary. I know your comment is two months old but people still are commenting on this two months from now and I seemingly have to explain a comment I didn't think would need explaining lol

  • @craignedoff991
    @craignedoff991 2 роки тому +548

    Zhukov could've been the Ulysses S. Grant of the Soviet Union, having first led his country's armies to victory, then assuming political power. He was not as ruthless as Kruschev, nor as politically connected. World history would have been much different with a General Secretary Zhukov.

    • @gregorylumban-gaol3889
      @gregorylumban-gaol3889 2 роки тому +125

      Yes but political rivals stood at his way and he’s already seen the horrors of war. He doesn’t need more stress by entering politics. The good man just wanted to enjoy life afterwards. Was a close friend with Eisenhower and Ike sent him a fishing pole because Zhukov loved to fish.
      It was said he used the fishing pole Eisenhower gifted him for the rest of his life.

    • @failtolawl
      @failtolawl 2 роки тому +53

      Grant didn't seize power in this soviet manner though, he was mild mannered and was propped up due to how unpopular Andrew Johnson was, if the Soviet system was close enough to the American one (where the leadership didn't have actual targets on their heads), then I'm sure Zhukov would have put more effort into being the leader.

    • @leezanda8430
      @leezanda8430 2 роки тому +22

      He have no interest in ruling. He have the bearing of sovereign but decided to not use it. He was content seeing his soldiers fed and live well.

    • @LeonWagg
      @LeonWagg 2 роки тому +38

      This is nothing but a wet dream of the west. You can think whatever you want about Zhukov as a military officer, but at the end of the day, he was part of that regime, and his loyalty is still to the communist party. In fact, Zhukov was even a more hard-line communist than Khrushchev. I mean, he was literally one of a few people in the leadership who supported military intervention in Hungary from the beginning, even when people like Khrushchev were skeptical. At the end of the day, the fact Zhukov was a communist just like the rest of them and although it would be interesting from a historical perspective having him as a leader of the Soviet Union, nothing much would change in terms of Soviet domestic policy or foreign policy.

    • @szellemikutmergezes9810
      @szellemikutmergezes9810 2 роки тому +3

      @@failtolawl JFK and Lincoln: Am i a joke to you?

  • @thomassvatos6300
    @thomassvatos6300 3 місяці тому +3

    This film gets Shakespearean in the end - one would think by this point it should be called "The Death of Beria."

    • @SuperGreatSphinx
      @SuperGreatSphinx 2 місяці тому +1

      William Shakespeare
      26 April, 1564 - 23 April, 1616

  • @Best.Of.Britian
    @Best.Of.Britian Рік тому +7

    You know after researching about beria the army guy taking the woman out of the building and saying "you're safe" has a whole other meaning

  • @pofromteletubbies1243
    @pofromteletubbies1243 3 роки тому +145

    1:48 I want a 10 hours version of that sound

  • @lordandsaviourbobsemple4186
    @lordandsaviourbobsemple4186 3 роки тому +146

    COMRADE GENERAL SECRETARY, GET ON WITH IT!
    - Marshal Ivan Konev

    • @aikonoklas
      @aikonoklas 2 роки тому +1

      i just noticed he was another marshal of the soviet union.

    • @theokamis5865
      @theokamis5865 2 роки тому +2

      @@aikonoklas and not just any Marshal of the Soviet Union, but his army group beat Zhukov's army group into Berlin by a day - thanks to the gross incompetence of Feldmarschall von Schörner, a dyed-in-the-wool favorite and suckup to Hitler, and his army group immediately collapsing before Konev's army group, while the actual badass Wehrmacht general, Generaloberst Heinrici, despite being hopelessly outmanned, outgunned, and undercut by Hitler transferring most of his tanks to von Schörner, held his line for three days (thanks in part to a couple tactical mistakes Zhukov made), before von Schörner's army group's collapse and Zhukov's resource advantages broke his army group.

    • @tygrkhat4087
      @tygrkhat4087 Рік тому +2

      @@theokamis5865 Zhukov was hardly a sophisticated military strategist. His favored method was overwhelming superiority of troops and equipment and barrel through the enemy. When he got creative, it backfired. At the beginning of the Battle for Berlin, Zhukov was opposite the Seelow Heights. The Germans pulled back to positions on the Heights, so when Zhukov unleashed his artillery barrage, all it really did was create a smoke screen. Zhukov then had the idea to shine searchlights at the enemy lines with the hope of blinding them. The light reflected off the smoke and disoriented the Red Army. Subsequently, because of his impatience, his attack bogged down.

  • @vania1917
    @vania1917 Рік тому +6

    It's uncanny how this comedy sticks to actual events more than most dramas based on real events.

  • @charliekoughing866
    @charliekoughing866 Рік тому +6

    Something about how casual he says "hands up or I'll shoot you in the f*cking face" is somehow both intimidating as hell and hilarious

  • @Thanasis_Koligliatis
    @Thanasis_Koligliatis 3 роки тому +468

    1:25 - Ssoorry comrades, wrong room.
    - Go and killed them, will you

    • @magmat0585
      @magmat0585 3 роки тому +75

      @KingArthurII The one thing? What, was the genocide of Ukrainians, political dissidents, and the middle class not enough?

    • @deadstareffect
      @deadstareffect 3 роки тому +7

      @@magmat0585 this response is gold

    • @ivanrenic4243
      @ivanrenic4243 3 роки тому +16

      That's the best part, the way he just casually says it and the soldier just nods without question, like: "Yo, no prob."

    • @USSEnterprise6126
      @USSEnterprise6126 2 роки тому +3

      @@magmat0585 the Ukrainian part of that is extremely relevant now

  • @PikkaBite
    @PikkaBite 3 роки тому +792

    This movie is a masterpiece.

    • @maladetts
      @maladetts 3 роки тому +5

      You gotta be shitting me, to call this spiteful caricature disgrace of Goebbelsian-like propaganda a "masterpiece".

    • @wtw1427
      @wtw1427 3 роки тому +60

      @@maladetts get a grip its a film

    • @maladetts
      @maladetts 3 роки тому +2

      @@wtw1427
      I very well know it's a trash travesty film, and not a painting. Go sober up before giving unnecessary reminders.

    • @wtw1427
      @wtw1427 3 роки тому +60

      @@maladetts alright little Stalinist, cant cope with someone taking the piss out of you beloved ussr?

    • @jigenstoklasa7737
      @jigenstoklasa7737 3 роки тому +7

      @@maladetts Pretty sure Goebel's job was to make the common man target another group of common men.
      This targets elite and alludes to the abuses of the elite onto the common. Very different.
      Besides, Stalin's regime was a travesty, just as Lenin figured it would be.

  • @jeffsnowden5119
    @jeffsnowden5119 2 місяці тому +5

    All dictators take note. This is how it ends.

  • @cameronhodgetts920
    @cameronhodgetts920 2 місяці тому +1

    I love the scene where it goes from comedy to serious in a heartbeat, and Steve Buscemi just chews the scenery

  • @le_combattant2458
    @le_combattant2458 3 роки тому +47

    *Random soldiers* "Wrong room sorry"
    *marshal zhukov* "So you have choosen death"

    • @uusilm3245
      @uusilm3245 2 роки тому +14

      NKVD, it's like SS or If democrats\cia in merica do their own army