History Buffs: The Death of Stalin

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  • Опубліковано 27 тра 2024
  • Let's take a look at the dark comedy, The Death of Stalin! I hope you enjoy the review as much as we had fun making it!
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 14 тис.

  • @WindFireAllThatKindOfThing
    @WindFireAllThatKindOfThing 5 років тому +4931

    "Dark Humor is like Food. Not everyone gets it."
    - Stalin

    • @raphuscucullatus7845
      @raphuscucullatus7845 5 років тому +230

      Ahahahaha.... _where did my rations go_

    • @axcelmartinez1122
      @axcelmartinez1122 5 років тому +45

      Underrated comment

    • @ze_rubenator
      @ze_rubenator 5 років тому +45

      @ThatOneAsianBroChick The USA is currently starving Yemen, nobody seems to care.

    • @ze_rubenator
      @ze_rubenator 5 років тому +24

      @ThatOneAsianBroChick I don't hate you, just your government and your foreign policy. Just like I don't hate the people of Palestine or Israel, in spite of the major clusterfuck that is that whole region. I have yet to meet an American who isn't excessively nice and obnoxiously loud. You're a special bunch, but you're alright.
      The US and UK governments have been aiding Saudi Arabia in a total embargo of Yemen, as well as targeted attacks against agricultural land, food industry and water treatment plants, that has lead to widespread famine and an outbreak of cholera. 60 000 children have died of starvation alone in the last few years. This war is being waged against civilians, and is in blatant violation of the Geneva Convention, human rights and common decency.

    • @nguyenduyphuc3924
      @nguyenduyphuc3924 5 років тому +4

      Ze Rubenator I mean, they been doing that since the 60’s and I don’t think anyone care at all.

  • @Frserthegreenengine
    @Frserthegreenengine 5 років тому +9237

    She: "Come over!"
    Stalin: "I can't, I'm sending people to gulag!"
    She: "My parents aren't home"
    Stalin: "I know!"

  • @SamButler22
    @SamButler22 11 місяців тому +514

    I love that Jason Isaacs decided to use a Yorkshire accent because Zhukov was known to talk back to Stalin, and Isaacs thought Yorkshiremen were the bluntest people he could think of

    • @loyalpiper
      @loyalpiper 8 місяців тому +18

      Anyone who's seen sharpe can agree

    • @davidberrell4725
      @davidberrell4725 7 місяців тому +15

      Off t gulag fo thee love, int that bad? Bit like Butlins😂

    • @scottvelez3154
      @scottvelez3154 6 місяців тому +23

      He would talk back to Stalin? I wonder how he managed to fight in war, while carrying around big steel balls.

    • @letsburn00
      @letsburn00 3 місяці тому +12

      It's also a case of the accent is "working class" and matched mentally the cultural perspective. Stalin himself had a fairly intense accent, even while running the USSR.

    • @filipnielsen1000
      @filipnielsen1000 3 місяці тому +9

      @@scottvelez3154Zhukov was also known to be one of the few people Stalin truly feared. As in he feared even killing him

  • @MrHeavy466
    @MrHeavy466 Рік тому +1714

    Jason Isaac's Zukhov was such a delight in this movie; he quickly became one of my favorite movie characters in recent memory.

    • @davidsigalow7349
      @davidsigalow7349 Рік тому +60

      Jason Isaac is a great actor with an incredibly broad range.

    • @bakist5540
      @bakist5540 Рік тому +22

      great acting although much of his portrayel is innacurate. particularly them saying he was the "head of the soviet army" right after stalins death this was not true as stalin had sent him to a far off post

    • @ayelmao1224
      @ayelmao1224 Рік тому +25

      I think that slight inaccuracy is worth it to get the character

    • @bakist5540
      @bakist5540 Рік тому +13

      @@ayelmao1224 well also his mannerisms aswell are uh very inaccurate. His family was utterly pissed when they saw how he was portrayed in the movie

    • @jessmorgan6732
      @jessmorgan6732 Рік тому +17

      @@bakist5540 Did anyone ever think of him as anything other than the head of the Red Army after the war?

  • @ray.shoesmith
    @ray.shoesmith 2 роки тому +3513

    One inaccuracy you didn't mention was that Zhukov's uniform actually has fewer decorations on it in the movie than it did in real life

    • @jacklucas5908
      @jacklucas5908 Рік тому +562

      If they had dared to put on the actual amount of medals they gave him, people would have laughed it off for being so "unrealistic".

    • @GrosvnerMcaffrey
      @GrosvnerMcaffrey Рік тому +285

      ​@Jack Lucas that happens alot Hacksaw ridge toned down how many people Doss saved because it seems "unrealistic" people need to learn truth is often stranger than fiction

    • @iamsinistar8971
      @iamsinistar8971 Рік тому +163

      ​@@jacklucas5908 Imagine having so many military decorations that people would think it's unrealistic if you showed them all on film.

    • @sergeityrrellp3496
      @sergeityrrellp3496 Рік тому

      Zhukov wearing his parade uniform everywhere around the clock is much bigger inaccuracy and nobody seem to care about.

    • @occam7382
      @occam7382 Рік тому +90

      @@iamsinistar8971, that's how much of a badass Zhukov was.

  • @samcnut
    @samcnut 5 років тому +4160

    Stalins son enters the room
    Literally everyone: Oh no
    This movie is gold

    • @rangarolls6018
      @rangarolls6018 5 років тому +5

      SamCnut

    • @CertifieLoverBoy
      @CertifieLoverBoy 5 років тому +7

      movie name plz

    • @bubbeleld8751
      @bubbeleld8751 5 років тому +50

      BEAHAPPYLOVE MV literally in the title of this yt video

    • @CertifieLoverBoy
      @CertifieLoverBoy 5 років тому +2

      @@bubbeleld8751 damn I sorry for asking a question....

    • @Roma_eterna
      @Roma_eterna 5 років тому +42

      SamCnut “ you’re not even a person! You’re a testicle!”

  • @aidancristoforo5530
    @aidancristoforo5530 Рік тому +1096

    Berria's death, begging for his life in tears and screams of fear, is one of the most cathartic scenes ive witnessed. Knowing this evil man, who imposed evil everywhere he went, was reduced to worse dishonor than many of his victims (some may have not begged for their lives but stood by their decisions and faced their sentence with equanimity)

    • @GarbageDisposal35
      @GarbageDisposal35 Рік тому

      Unfortunately for you, that isn’t true he was put on trial, found guilty and executed (idk if it’s in the video or not been a while since I’ve watched it

    • @zer-zd4gc
      @zer-zd4gc 11 місяців тому +98

      ​@@GarbageDisposal35 Actually stories of berias execution basically all mention the fact he begged for his life just before his execution

    • @GarbageDisposal35
      @GarbageDisposal35 11 місяців тому +4

      @@zer-zd4gc interesting, thank you!

    • @thejason755
      @thejason755 11 місяців тому +9

      @@zer-zd4gcand wasn’t his trial in the movie basically barely exaggerated from his actual show-trial?

    • @brucefreadrich1188
      @brucefreadrich1188 11 місяців тому +16

      @@thejason755 In the movie his trial is a bunch of politicians and military men shouting (justified) abuse and accusations at him in a barn before taking him outside (barely clear of the door) and shooting him unceremoniously in the head.

  • @pjdiver3
    @pjdiver3 Рік тому +552

    Steve Buscemi can't be made to look like anyone other than Steve Buscemi...but he's always a great choice for a movie

    • @georgekosko5124
      @georgekosko5124 5 місяців тому

      Who? That fucking animal Blundetto?

    • @MASTEROFEVIL
      @MASTEROFEVIL 3 місяці тому +11

      He played a very convincing teenager

    • @keaixiaomeinv
      @keaixiaomeinv 3 години тому +1

      @@MASTEROFEVIL how do you do, fellow comrade?

  • @Helios8170
    @Helios8170 4 роки тому +3980

    Number one line from the movie: "You're not even human! You're a *testicle!* "

    • @nothingtoseeheremovealong598
      @nothingtoseeheremovealong598 4 роки тому +120

      poor testicle man

    • @T.GLongstaff
      @T.GLongstaff 3 роки тому +80

      How old are you? Your not even a person! Your a testicle. 😂 Like what?

    • @holdenmcgroin5003
      @holdenmcgroin5003 3 роки тому +76

      @@T.GLongstaff "you're made mostly of hair!"

    • @mrmakrin21
      @mrmakrin21 3 роки тому +152

      “HOW OLD ARE YOU?!”
      “I’m...old”
      “YOU’RE NOT OLD!”
      “YOU’RE NOT EVEN A PERSON; YOU’RE A TESTICLE!”
      “YOU’RE MADE MOSTLY OF HAIR!”
      Best scene in all of cinema history

    • @devynescatell8302
      @devynescatell8302 3 роки тому +64

      Stalins son enters the room
      Literally everyone: Oh no
      This movie is gold

  • @howlingdin9332
    @howlingdin9332 5 років тому +4898

    One death is a tragedy,
    A million deaths are a statistic,
    Stalin's death is friggin' hilarious.

    • @SpinningTurtle66
      @SpinningTurtle66 5 років тому +29

      That quote is just generally wrong and stupid.

    • @chat3087
      @chat3087 5 років тому +104

      Why is it wrong and stupid?

    • @SpinningTurtle66
      @SpinningTurtle66 5 років тому +77

      Chatnawat Narakol A single person dies, you get upset. A single death affects a family. And its still a statistic.
      Millions of deaths are a bigger tragedy, yet still affect people and is a statistic.
      The idea that one death is different to millions in any way other than number of deaths is stupid.
      Keep in mind this quote is from a mass murdering psychopath.

    • @engagementengagement8836
      @engagementengagement8836 5 років тому +18

      Shadow Of Light no

    • @dreadpirateroberts4764
      @dreadpirateroberts4764 5 років тому +194

      @@SpinningTurtle66 The death of Julius Ceasar was such a tragedy it shaped the direction of the entire rest of the western world.
      How many people can you remember died in Ceasars conquest of Gaul off the top of your head?

  • @PresidentAutumn
    @PresidentAutumn Рік тому +1034

    Interesting story about Svetlana and Beria. When Stalin was at a meeting, and heard that Beria was alone at his residence with Svetlana, he raced home in his car and threatened to kill Beria if he ever got near Svetlana again (due to his reputation).

    • @liliesaregoodfortheliver2954
      @liliesaregoodfortheliver2954 Рік тому +127

      Another party member had a similar encounter regarding his daughter and Beria.

    • @ob2kenobi388
      @ob2kenobi388 11 місяців тому +46

      _...Based Stalin???_

    • @PandaMonium92827
      @PandaMonium92827 10 місяців тому

      The fact Stalin even let him stay alive to receive the threat is telling enough. Usually he'd just kill you.

    • @joelthorstensson2772
      @joelthorstensson2772 7 місяців тому +39

      And, when the guards got to Stalin's house, they found Beria in the room that was literally as far away from Svetlana as humanly possible.

    • @user-ue6fb8yu6c
      @user-ue6fb8yu6c 5 місяців тому +39

      And with a very good reason. Beria was notorious also for carrying out torture in his own home, and then killing the victims or having them killed in his basement. Shortly after the collapse of the USSR, in the early '90s, remains of some seven women and two children were found in the basement of his house, all buried naked (no traces of clothing, or buttons, or zips whatsoever). Beria would often stalk the streets of Moscow in his office car, out to spot young women or children who he found attractive, or had his men do the same for him so he could save the time and effort of acquiring his next victims.

  • @Frostaltered
    @Frostaltered Рік тому +311

    I love that the babushka was saying how she lived through Stalin’s reign and the movie wasnt at all offensive to her

    • @PandaMonium92827
      @PandaMonium92827 10 місяців тому +48

      I feel most of the people complaining about it are the opposite of her. Nobody was there so they are extra ashamed for some reason. My plumber is about her age from Soviet Ukraine and he thought the movie was brilliant, and he actually lost family members to Cannibal Island!

  • @twat3789
    @twat3789 3 роки тому +7132

    “She stormed off, locked herself in her room, and shot herself in the head”
    “Svetlana would inherit her mothers gentle nature”

    • @pocket_historian1807
      @pocket_historian1807 3 роки тому +169

      Yes

    • @marcusgarvey8388
      @marcusgarvey8388 3 роки тому +141

      Seems legit

    • @SheepDog-hj4jx
      @SheepDog-hj4jx 3 роки тому +142

      Don't make me laugh bro
      *silently chuckles in the corners*

    • @doctadeath2020
      @doctadeath2020 3 роки тому +88

      It's commonly presumed she didn't shoot herself in the head. Stalin had a soldier go to her room and do it for her.

    • @Luke-ho9xi
      @Luke-ho9xi 3 роки тому +7

      @@pocket_historian1807 hungry. 4t nba. B

  • @SmoothOperator739
    @SmoothOperator739 3 роки тому +2254

    “HOW OLD ARE YOU”
    “I’m old.”

  • @jaykaufman9782
    @jaykaufman9782 11 місяців тому +295

    One reason "The Death of Stalin" is such a delight is because almost all the cast members are elderly or middle-aged actors -- they are old pros having the time of their lives with the material. Not only does every look, every line turn to gold at their touch, but I get the feeling they were having so much fun, their pure joy comes through as well! And could you imagine how good "The Death of Stalin" would be as a stage production, with these same actors playing their roles night after night, playing with their parts, changing their pace, delivery, emphasis, playing off one another's tiny changes?

  • @TheBurgerkrieg
    @TheBurgerkrieg 2 роки тому +393

    one of the wildest things about the movie is that they toned down how horrible Beria was, specifically when it came to rape and paedophilia. One of the few times Stalin was reportedly terrified is when he found out Beria was at a dacha with Svetlana. Beria's drives around town "browsing" for rape victims from his car actually spawned the urban legend of the Black Volga, which was the car he tended to be driven around in. You can find variations of it all over the former Soviet states.

    • @VoiceOfTheEmperor
      @VoiceOfTheEmperor 11 місяців тому +56

      Yeah. Beria would have given a lot of SS a run for their money.

    • @vibovitold
      @vibovitold 11 місяців тому +43

      i'm not sure if black Volga can be linked to Beria specifically.
      it was pretty much THE car driven by communist party officials in general.
      this urban legend - which i confirm was a thing, and not just in former Soviet states (if you mean USSR republics), also in satellite states, such as Poland - seems to have been invented at some point in the 1960s, somewhat later than Beria's terror.

    • @PandaMonium92827
      @PandaMonium92827 10 місяців тому +24

      They didn't need to show it in order for us to put it together and that's what movies need to go back to doing when it comes to SA.
      Someone I know interviewed a girl who survived one of his attacks....they ended up not using most of it because of what she described.
      But he would bring up fake charges on people just so he could abuse them. Having his men troll the streets for his "types" in a blacked out Volga. Men having to watch him do horrid things to their female family members to get them to confess to false charges. Women rounded up from gulag and spat back put like scraps....he'd go as far as to promise them freedom if they survived what he did to them just to send them back or to a worse gulag.
      Safe to say the gunshot was too merciful.

    • @Chewberto
      @Chewberto 5 місяців тому +6

      Honestly, as someone who knew nothing about this period, I legitimately thought they were trying to portray Beria as a "redeemed antagonist" due to his attempts to reform/release prisoners and his consoling of Svetlana. Now knowing what he actually did IRL, it's safe to say they went a little too easy on him in the movie. I suppose you could argue that his infamy preceded him and should've informed my opinion from the get-go, as it would with a portrayal of Hitler or Himmler, but his name isn't especially well known beyond those who are specifically interested in Soviet history, whereas nearly everyone west of Asia knows about Hitler.

    • @panaitteodor9982
      @panaitteodor9982 5 місяців тому +3

      From what I know from my dad and graddad black Volga brand cars were used by the secret police, so if you saw one parked in your neighborhood it ment someone was getting disappeared.

  • @alessiodelcastillo1613
    @alessiodelcastillo1613 4 роки тому +4063

    I'm asking for a Prequel: The Death of Lenin
    Stalin vs Trotsky

    • @stanarian5238
      @stanarian5238 4 роки тому +161

      HighburyAFCSoul
      That would actually be quite good

    • @alessiodelcastillo1613
      @alessiodelcastillo1613 4 роки тому +20

      Yarn Agnates fr

    • @sjsbviufvibwvuspi
      @sjsbviufvibwvuspi 4 роки тому +301

      Party memeber: "wheres trotsky, its lenins funeral"
      Stalin:"I gave that fucker the wrong date"

    • @wolfumz
      @wolfumz 4 роки тому +80

      I've read up on Soviet history, frankly, the political intrigue that went on from 1929-1940 is the most fascinating. Stalin forced his political opponents to willfully concede their power and publicly prostrate themselves before stalin at the seventeenth party Congress in 1932... and even so, he still had like 80% of the congresses delegates murdered. Then, he had his most loyal followers, (the ones who carried out the purge) executed as traitors and terrorists.
      Reading about what it was like in that era is straight up the most horrifying shit I've ever read.

    • @alessiodelcastillo1613
      @alessiodelcastillo1613 4 роки тому +6

      @@wolfumz Very cool

  • @leprechaunbutreallyjustamidget
    @leprechaunbutreallyjustamidget 2 роки тому +9106

    It warms my heart knowing that Stalin died alone and scared in a puddle of his own making.

  • @Rex-qf7en
    @Rex-qf7en 11 місяців тому +242

    The best line in the movie is where Zhukov tells his men to shoot the guy who just walks in the room as a joke. It empitomized the film as a whole.

    • @pinchevulpes
      @pinchevulpes 10 місяців тому +14

      *”oh for fucks sake!”* 💀

    • @ilikecheese4518
      @ilikecheese4518 8 місяців тому +16

      the best part that you may have overlooked is those guys are the same guys he was talking to during his introduction scene. the guy who he said he would ride raw if he was stuck in a frock

    • @cmurphy0707
      @cmurphy0707 5 місяців тому +4

      That was a deleted scene but man I wish they kept it.

  • @shawnmiller4781
    @shawnmiller4781 11 місяців тому +489

    Fun fact: There is pretty good evidence that the first westerner to learn of Stalins Death was a 21 year old US Air Force Sergeant stationed in Germany who was tasked with monitoring Soviet radio channels.
    His name was J R Cash.The Air Force wouldn’t let him enlist with initials as his name so he enlisted as James Ray Cash the names being the ones his parents couldn’t decide on when he was born so they used just the initials.
    He ended up getting out of the Air Force and becoming a pretty famous singer/songwriter

    • @ob2kenobi388
      @ob2kenobi388 11 місяців тому +49

      Wait-Johnny Cash!? Small world, I suppose!

    • @Carpediem357
      @Carpediem357 11 місяців тому +22

      @@ob2kenobi388yep Johnny Cash I had to look it up.

    • @tomjones5650
      @tomjones5650 11 місяців тому +1

      No Shit Cool.

    • @RendallRen
      @RendallRen 11 місяців тому +10

      And then everybody clapped and cheered

    • @james_fisch
      @james_fisch 11 місяців тому +27

      @@RendallRen And that Stalin's name? Albert Einstein

  • @Ben-zs5vd
    @Ben-zs5vd 5 років тому +2984

    Hippty hoppity
    your farm is now
    S T A T E P R O P E R T Y

  • @termit5274
    @termit5274 3 роки тому +4471

    Stalin: Dies.
    literally everyone in the soviet union: *S V E T L A N A !*

    • @BurgiM
      @BurgiM 3 роки тому +8

      @Alexander Leonard da tovarish!

    • @creativename2683
      @creativename2683 3 роки тому +11

      @Alexander Leonard nice

    • @Bruh-hq1hx
      @Bruh-hq1hx 3 роки тому +7

      @Alexander Leonard oh huh why?

    • @herryis4392
      @herryis4392 3 роки тому +68

      "How can you plot and running at the same "

    • @drartemisa21
      @drartemisa21 3 роки тому +19

      The race begins!

  • @peterbockholm3176
    @peterbockholm3176 Рік тому +110

    I read the book "20 letters to a friend" by Svetlana Alliluyeva (Stalin's daughter) some months before the film came out. I haven't seen anything that indicates that the writers based the script on her book, but they sure did read it and took a lot of notes. Her book backs up most of what happens in the movie. She also speaks fondly of her father as a parent, that came as quite a surprise to me. The book also gives an inside look at Beria, whom she hated intensely. Not only because he was pure evil but also because in the last ten years or so of Stalin's life he manipulated Stalin for his own agenda. There have been some years since then but I remember being amazed about how accurate the film actually was, and still being a great comedy.

    • @scottvelez3154
      @scottvelez3154 11 місяців тому +6

      He manipulated Stalin? Dude either had balls as big as Russia itself or Stalin was losing his marbles.

    • @chrislane8466
      @chrislane8466 Місяць тому +1

      Thank you. I'll take this as a recommendation, it's on my list.

    • @peterbockholm3176
      @peterbockholm3176 Місяць тому +4

      @@scottvelez3154 Both, it's quite clear in the book. She hated Beria not only for being a disgusting human being but also for how he manipulated her aging and weakened father for personal gains. Stalin wasn't the man that he used to be in the years before his death

    • @EvaLorna
      @EvaLorna Місяць тому +1

      That reminds me of the urban legend from my country "The black ambulance" witch apparently steals children to take they'r organs. It used to terrify me as a child. I still find it creepy..

    • @peterbockholm3176
      @peterbockholm3176 Місяць тому

      @@EvaLorna I can understand that, any child would be terrified and few of them would be able to really let it go. Many of them, especially men, would claim to have done it but deep inside, in their dreams?
      Would you mind sharing which country it is? I'm very interested in urban legends, history and politics and this is a scenario where they all may come together so I would like to learn more.

  • @ayelmao1224
    @ayelmao1224 Рік тому +103

    “Hands up or I’ll shoot you in the fookin face” -Field Marshall Georgy Zhukov, probably

  • @jonp72
    @jonp72 4 роки тому +4453

    I also found it funny that Steve Buscemi's natural Brooklyn accent resonated perfectly with his portrayal of Khrushchev's boorishness and lack of refinement.

    • @thearea51raidwasboring
      @thearea51raidwasboring 3 роки тому +396

      Steve Buscemi really made Khrushchev for me. Movie wouldn't be the same without him.

    • @nathanielleack4842
      @nathanielleack4842 3 роки тому +44

      I mean with only three years of formal schooling what can you expect?

    • @jjturner4424
      @jjturner4424 3 роки тому +96

      I find it refreshing in a history pic, given that they always use English accents for historical characters. Khrushchev didn’t speak with an English accent, and the film is a fictional account anyhow, so why should he not speak in a Brooklyn accent.

    • @nemrody7828
      @nemrody7828 3 роки тому +173

      @@jjturner4424 if it were to be fully historical they would all speak Russian. But to be honest their specific English accents are the perfect counterparts to the real life accents of the characters involved, reflecting their background

    • @porchofgeese_crockpot
      @porchofgeese_crockpot 3 роки тому +106

      @@nemrody7828 It be funny if Stalin spoke in a Southern Accent, ya know, 'cause Georgia

  • @KC-up7hf
    @KC-up7hf 5 років тому +1639

    "You're not a person! You're a testicle!"
    10/10 best quote

    • @turmuthoer
      @turmuthoer 5 років тому +175

      Nah, best quote was "That fucker thinks he can take on the red army? I fucked Germany, I think I can take a flesh lump in a fookin' waistcoat."

    • @Jsay18
      @Jsay18 5 років тому +45

      "HERE'S YOUR FUCKING HARMONY!"

    • @rynemcgriffin1752
      @rynemcgriffin1752 5 років тому +55

      K California *”SIT DOWN! DO NOT DEFY ME! SIT YOUR ASS DOWN!”*

    • @weldonwin
      @weldonwin 5 років тому +31

      "What does a war hero have to do to get some lubrication around here?"

    • @shurik121
      @shurik121 5 років тому +37

      @@turmuthoer Basically, every second of Jason Isaacs' Zhukov on screen is comedy gold.

  • @rockytopbritt
    @rockytopbritt Рік тому +67

    I really like the actual note that the pianist wrote. It was brave and defiant but somehow not hateful at all.

    • @Cyberfender1
      @Cyberfender1 Рік тому +1

      Unlike Stalin( and others) God still is so merciful. I herd of something ,That stalin shook his fist up to God right before he died. Not sure if this was a fact.

    • @vulpes7079
      @vulpes7079 5 місяців тому

      ​​@@Cyberfender1 no one knows what Stalin did before he died. Stalin was an atheist and so didn't believe God existed, so it's very unlikely that he'd be angry at God

  • @Synthetic-Rabbit
    @Synthetic-Rabbit 11 місяців тому +50

    The guards just ignoring him when he collapses after he's spent his entire life consolidating his power and making sure he's secure in his bubble is poetic justice if I've ever seen it before.

    • @hullutsuhna
      @hullutsuhna 5 місяців тому

      fun fact: Stalin had ordered his guards not to enter without permission & then he tested their obedience by faking a medical emergency, when the guards entered to check on him, he had them shot.

    • @Vanishingink4
      @Vanishingink4 Місяць тому

      They were told to never enter his room under fear of being sent to the gulag. He would randomly scream and if they went in there he’d execute them or send them to the gula.

    • @Synthetic-Rabbit
      @Synthetic-Rabbit Місяць тому

      @@Vanishingink4 I know - that's why it's ironic and funny.
      They know what's going on but because of his own bullshit - they can't help.

  • @tagtraumen
    @tagtraumen 4 роки тому +1108

    “I f*cked Germany, I think I can take a flesh-lump in a f*ckin waistcoat” 😂
    Jason Isaacs *makes* this movie 👌🏻

  • @MikeFromOz
    @MikeFromOz 5 років тому +1740

    Jason Isaacs as Zhukov ruled this movie.

    • @TheAngelobarker
      @TheAngelobarker 5 років тому +69

      Mike FromOz so surprised the Russians hated him in it he's such a badass

    • @itsmedik8628
      @itsmedik8628 5 років тому +57

      Really? He was my favourive part of the film.

    • @scr3aming3agle83
      @scr3aming3agle83 5 років тому +120

      "Alright whats a war hero got to do to get some lube around here" 😂😂😂😂
      Hes the perfect zhukov

    • @weldonwin
      @weldonwin 5 років тому +118

      "I may be smiling but I am VERY fuckin' angry"

    • @Cancoillotteman
      @Cancoillotteman 5 років тому +28

      I admit he was great, perfect entrance by the way ^^

  • @giacomoromano8842
    @giacomoromano8842 11 місяців тому +64

    As always, "the difference between fiction and reality is that fiction has to make sense."
    Never truer words were spoken, considering this movie.

    • @stevenhall8027
      @stevenhall8027 2 місяці тому +2

      Even though this movie appears to be outlandish, it is probably closer to the truth than most so called historical movies. What a circus it must have been !

  • @mikeor-
    @mikeor- 11 місяців тому +134

    My grandparents all lived under Stalin. To my paternal grandfather, who was eighteen years old when he died, Stalin was a god. He was living in Ukraine when he heard the news about the leader's death. His friend came to his house and told him: "Stalin is gone." To this, my grandfather said: "How can our fatherland survive now?" His friend simply replied with a quote from Stalin: "Life has become better, comrade. Life has become happier."

    • @mattevans4377
      @mattevans4377 11 місяців тому +19

      Now that's how you throw shade, lol.

  • @samjohnson3287
    @samjohnson3287 5 років тому +1068

    "HOW OLD ARE YOU?"
    "I'm.. Old."
    "YOU'RE NOT OLD!"

    • @3dheadcreeps87
      @3dheadcreeps87 5 років тому +160

      Sam Johnson
      “You’re not even a person. You’re a testicle”

    • @jaxone2639
      @jaxone2639 5 років тому +5

      Nevermind the fact he looks like he's 20

    • @peterf.229
      @peterf.229 5 років тому +5

      being honest that guy looked like he was in middle school haha

    • @bigpenny3509
      @bigpenny3509 5 років тому +7

      "You're made almost entirely of hair"

    • @thesupertsar4473
      @thesupertsar4473 4 роки тому

      @@bigpenny3509 *mostly

  • @billrhodes5603
    @billrhodes5603 4 роки тому +3037

    "It takes a brave man to be a coward in the Red Army"
    -Stalin

    • @theguythatcould
      @theguythatcould 4 роки тому +214

      Ironic, given that he was the biggest coward of all.

    • @Caesar88888
      @Caesar88888 4 роки тому +120

      @@theguythatcould no Stalin wasnt coward, he used to rob banks in imperial Russia

    • @nothingtoseeheremovealong598
      @nothingtoseeheremovealong598 4 роки тому +172

      AjitaDas399 what an honorable man he was

    • @Caesar88888
      @Caesar88888 3 роки тому +186

      @@nothingtoseeheremovealong598 he wasnt good man, but he definetely had balls of steel

    • @michaelkaminski1166
      @michaelkaminski1166 3 роки тому +32

      @@theguythatcould When the Germans were approaching Moscow, Stalin refused to flee the city.

  • @philipscalf9147
    @philipscalf9147 10 місяців тому +18

    “You’re not even a person, you’re a testicle” has to be one of the best lines in cinema

  • @musicmanfelipe
    @musicmanfelipe Рік тому +27

    Interesting other note about the accents, Jason Isaacs used a Yorkshire accent for Zhukov because, according to him, speaking in a Yorkshire accent means "don't fuck with me."

    • @zetetick395
      @zetetick395 11 місяців тому +5

      Yeah, it's a no-nonsense straight talking accent (in the UK, at least)

    • @vibovitold
      @vibovitold 11 місяців тому +1

      @@zetetick395 that's the accent used by Finchy in "The Office", right? (i'm not a native speaker, though i lived in the UK for a few years)

    • @zetetick395
      @zetetick395 11 місяців тому +2

      @@vibovitold Yeah man that's pretty much it. 😸_👍

  • @NoGamertag11
    @NoGamertag11 4 роки тому +841

    Nikita Khrushchev "I’ve been picking out funeral cushions with slim Hitler over there"

    • @blatherskite3009
      @blatherskite3009 4 роки тому +38

      Classic line in a very funny film :)

    • @kylefitz.2639
      @kylefitz.2639 4 роки тому +41

      "You... you invited the bishops? Who else are we friends with now, did you invite any old Nazis?"

    • @MaxwellAerialPhotography
      @MaxwellAerialPhotography 2 роки тому +8

      Ordinary Productions “why in gods ass did you invite the bishops Nikita?”
      -says a man who once quested for the holy grail.

  • @sethleoric2598
    @sethleoric2598 5 років тому +2360

    Russian man: *gets sent to Gulag
    Russian man: *gets drafted
    Russian man: *gets taken to concentration camp
    Russian man: ah shit, here we go again

    • @lsd-rickb-1728
      @lsd-rickb-1728 5 років тому +5

      Lol

    • @Dragonblaster1
      @Dragonblaster1 5 років тому +206

      Russian man: *gets released from concentration camp
      Russian man: *gets sent back to Gulag

    • @sethleoric2598
      @sethleoric2598 5 років тому +83

      @@Dragonblaster1 "Honey! I'm back from vacation!"

    • @beyondprogressive370
      @beyondprogressive370 5 років тому +27

      It builds strong character

    • @sethleoric2598
      @sethleoric2598 5 років тому +33

      @@beyondprogressive370 "honey I'm going on a business trip!"

  • @distilledwill
    @distilledwill 11 місяців тому +36

    I do wonder if they weren't suggesting that Molotov didn't love his wife, but rather that he was so tied up in the ruse of denouncing her (and then that conflicted with her release (and so forgiveness??)) that he couldn't get the line straight, and so he would flip between denouncing her and showing effusive love for her. Kind of like double-think.

  • @danielponder690
    @danielponder690 11 місяців тому +27

    One of my favorite movies! The score is a great tribute to Shostakovich and Tchaikovsky.

  • @Liam-ly8rv
    @Liam-ly8rv 5 років тому +2779

    One man who Stalin was worried about killing was Marshall Zhukov. While Stalin had him stripped of his command later in 1946, he wasn't brave enough to kill him. Zhukov was incredibly popular in the USSR and abroad. Stalin was in awe and jealous of him. And Zhukov had no problems argue with Stalin openly. Even Stalin had his limits.

    • @danzetterstrom7917
      @danzetterstrom7917 5 років тому +503

      Well he did fuck Germany. Pretty sure he could take a flesh lump in a fucking waistcoat as well.

    • @peterf.229
      @peterf.229 5 років тому +239

      @@danzetterstrom7917 ha. he could do that blindfolded and hogtied. Zhukov was brilliant on the field. he fought in the northern tier first and then later went south for the southern army. His armies killed more Nazis than anyone else's.

    • @somerandomguyfromthebeyond1821
      @somerandomguyfromthebeyond1821 5 років тому +135

      funny thing is Zhukov became a master in using Stalin's mode, usually by observing Stalin smoking habits at the moment

    • @MultiB2D
      @MultiB2D 5 років тому +150

      You are correct, Zhukov is incredibly popular in little old Mongolia, Zhukov oversaw the Battle of Khalkhin Gol, A battle where the Japanese attacked Mongolia.

    • @NinjaAO42
      @NinjaAO42 5 років тому +72

      @@peterf.229 I'd say Zhukov is arguably overrated and there is some discussion as to whether Operation Bagration was a success because Zhukov had minimal involvement in the planning phase. But I don't disagree that he is a badass at heart

  • @drby0788
    @drby0788 3 роки тому +856

    "All those in favor?!."
    "Carried?."
    "U....nanimously, great!."

    • @drartemisa21
      @drartemisa21 3 роки тому +35

      My stomach hurt so much during that scene from laughing

    • @MichaelBrodie68
      @MichaelBrodie68 2 роки тому +3

      Studied Soviet economic history at Uni. Yes, this scene in particular absolutely cracked me up. Very funny film. And, knowing the history, very dark humour.

  • @cerambyx-8
    @cerambyx-8 11 місяців тому +18

    Thanks for talking about this, and I don't think people fully understand the details of Stalins regime of terror. My grandfather, his 4 siblings and parents had their properties and land taken away (they were slaztcha- petty nobility) by Stalin's de-kulakization regime and ended up in a gulag in Arkhangelsk, until 1941 when a deal was made with the polish government (which was exiled in London) for a release of prisoners, and luckily my family were in the group they did release. My grandfather was too young to fight. My great grandfather fought with Polish II Corps, in the Battle of Monte Cassino. My great uncle Piotr fought with the Polish 1st Armoured Division, in Normandy, and died in 1944 due friendly fire in the Battle of Falaise. He is buried in a french military cemetery in Graville Langennerie, near Falaise. The women released from the gulags were sent to Polish ran camps in Tanzania which is where my grandfather's sisters met my grandmother to be, before coming to the UK.

  • @wee4567
    @wee4567 Рік тому +33

    I went into this loving the movie, and came out seeing just how true it was. Not because of the historical accuracies, more so the reaction of the current Russian government mirroring the oppressive actions of the former Soviet government in response to the movie satirizing said government. You can’t write this stuff

  • @MrIgorkap
    @MrIgorkap 2 роки тому +3211

    My great grandfather actually was a researcher at a university in the USSR who was sent on a research expedition for two weeks. When he came back he found his whole department had been purged and he avoided it only by not being there.

    • @PrincessLockette
      @PrincessLockette 2 роки тому +45

      What happend to him after that?

    • @omarfannoun417
      @omarfannoun417 2 роки тому +24

      What happened to him after that event?

    • @TheDukeOfDallas
      @TheDukeOfDallas 2 роки тому +475

      @@omarfannoun417 probably went on a "life-long research expedition" outside of the USSR.

    • @jordanjoestar-turniptruck
      @jordanjoestar-turniptruck 2 роки тому +26

      What was his field of study?

    • @TheWolfElder
      @TheWolfElder 2 роки тому +197

      @@jordanjoestar-turniptruck A field not in Russia.

  • @lillyie
    @lillyie 3 роки тому +2493

    Imagine being Stalin's mother wanting him to be a priest and turned up to be the dictator of your country

    • @PrincessLockette
      @PrincessLockette 2 роки тому +130

      She was probably dissapointed in him

    • @fifa4lifeunknow795
      @fifa4lifeunknow795 2 роки тому +21

      I mean If i was her i would be more proud but his actions Maybi not

    • @dkupke
      @dkupke 2 роки тому +320

      True story: he rarely saw her after taking power-he was probably afraid of her. During her final months, knowing her health was failing, he built himself up to visit her. At one point he asked her “Why did you beat me so much?” She told him “That’s why you turned out so well,” and at the end she asked him “Just what are you now?” He told her “Well I’m sort of like the tsar.” She grumbled “You’d have been better off as a priest.”

    • @Bestnightcoreofalltime
      @Bestnightcoreofalltime 2 роки тому +42

      Maybe he should have tried to sign up at an art school 🌚

    • @mijoepa
      @mijoepa 2 роки тому +15

      Same could be said about Hitler and him being a painter lol

  • @robertresino7669
    @robertresino7669 2 роки тому +23

    Honestly I’m not sure if you know your channel does this, but it makes me want to see these kinds of movies. I love history and wanted to learn more about what happened after stalins death. I didn’t even know this movie existed and now I wanna watch it

    • @Jamietheroadrunner
      @Jamietheroadrunner 2 роки тому

      It is so good! It’s not 100% accurate but Iannuci is such a talent (he created/wrote Veep too) that you’ll laugh out loud while watching it.

    • @zetetick395
      @zetetick395 11 місяців тому

      Yeah, we watched *The Death of Stalin* (2018) in a black-comedy double bill with *Jojo Rabbit* (2019) - A great, memorable movie night!
      Funny, moving, and gave us lots to talk about. 😸_👍

  • @duketranslucent3rd
    @duketranslucent3rd Рік тому +15

    Brilliant as always, Nick. Surprised, though, that among the inaccuracies you didn't point out that in real life Beria got a trial (albeit a show trial) whereas in the film he very much didn't.

  • @alecduquette7500
    @alecduquette7500 5 років тому +422

    "You're not even a person, you're a testicle!"... I've found my new favorite insult

  • @percussionfellow6168
    @percussionfellow6168 3 роки тому +2138

    I'm reminded of the quote, "In Russia, every ten years everything changes, and nothing changes in 200 years."

    • @gastonbell108
      @gastonbell108 3 роки тому +77

      Tell a Russian that and get a pile of poorly-translated SUKA BLYAT in reply. Or a fist, if you're in person. Putin has made that country more thuggish, poor and stupid than it was at the falling of the Iron Curtain. As you say, some things never change; Russia is too big and too poor to ever be truly democratic.

    • @mwnciboo
      @mwnciboo 3 роки тому +56

      @@gastonbell108 They love suffering, and they love a strong man.

    • @Alf763
      @Alf763 3 роки тому +25

      @@gastonbell108 democracy just means more tyrants with less accountability

    • @kapitan19969838
      @kapitan19969838 3 роки тому +59

      In Poland we have something along the lines of:
      "How incredibly much must things change for everything to stay the same"

    • @efxnews4776
      @efxnews4776 3 роки тому +31

      @@kapitan19969838 in Brazil we have a similar quote too: "Brazil is the country of the future and always will be..."

  • @arthurp-er1yz
    @arthurp-er1yz 7 місяців тому +2

    Excellent work. I binged on your history buffs library. Truly enjoyable.

  • @Henners1991
    @Henners1991 Рік тому +7

    14:14 - "But the cost was far higher than all the other Allied nations combined"
    Kuomintang China: "Am I a joke to you?"

  • @WJINTL
    @WJINTL 3 роки тому +1537

    *NKVD executing officers after cover up operations*
    "I couldn't find any evidence that this happened"
    ...isn't that the point?

    • @wormswithteeth
      @wormswithteeth 3 роки тому +58

      *gottem*

    • @julymagnus493
      @julymagnus493 3 роки тому +78

      Not sure if this is a joke comment but just in case. Cover up operations can still leave behind evidence and as a general rule you should scale your belief in something to the facts. This means that a lot of history wont be neat and have easy answers but that's life.

    • @JewTube001
      @JewTube001 3 роки тому +43

      executing your own junior officers just makes things harder to cover up because now you cover up them as well, and without the help you were getting before because you just killed them.

    • @JohnKobaRuddy
      @JohnKobaRuddy 3 роки тому

      Not one word any of you have said is true

    • @Sakattack2023
      @Sakattack2023 3 роки тому +6

      @@julymagnus493 yeah but when known propagandists and murders say they didn’t Murder a group of people that don’t exist anymore. I’m skeptical. And the fact you aren’t tells me you weren’t suited to survival.

  • @OzymandiasWasRight
    @OzymandiasWasRight 3 роки тому +2204

    Georgy zhukov needs a spin-off series. I could watch an episode of him grocery shopping and laugh my ass off.

    • @KR4FTW3RK
      @KR4FTW3RK 3 роки тому +153

      I just skipped over his biography on wikipedia... there'd be tons of material. He participated in pretty much all soviet conflicts between 1914 and past WW2.

    • @SlyBlu7
      @SlyBlu7 3 роки тому +231

      The portrayal of Zhukov was freakin amazing. He was the perfect straight man to all the insane politicking, but also the most over-the-top action-hero trope, which fits perfectly with his image among the Russian people. The bit where you don't see Zhukov, but just see Vassily's face when he recognizes him and has just enough time and presence to shout 'Medic!' before getting laid out by one punch - comedy gold

    • @rick-potts
      @rick-potts 3 роки тому +94

      @@SlyBlu7 Isaacs' performance is superb. Steals every scene he is in.

    • @ghazghkullthraka9714
      @ghazghkullthraka9714 3 роки тому +65

      Vasili: exists
      Zhukov: Hi kids, do you like violence
      Honestly, I be the same around a guy like Visili

    • @cmd31220
      @cmd31220 3 роки тому +52

      Agreed. That entrance is freaking gold. Like, Irons probably improvised the jacket flip and the director thought "yeah, that's the most pimp thing I've ever seen. Let's do it in slow motion

  • @lewiegan216
    @lewiegan216 Рік тому +34

    The quote from Marshall Zhukov is hilarious giving the knowledge what he did in Eastern Europe during the offensive of the red army

    • @VoiceOfTheEmperor
      @VoiceOfTheEmperor 11 місяців тому +3

      Which one?

    • @lewiegan216
      @lewiegan216 11 місяців тому

      @@VoiceOfTheEmperor “That fucker thinks he can take on the Red Army. I fucked Germany I think I can take a flesh lump in a waistcoat.” 😂

    • @what8562
      @what8562 10 місяців тому +1

      And for a couple of years after

  • @Robertward111
    @Robertward111 11 місяців тому +7

    "In devastation, Nadia stormed out of the banquet, locked herself in her bedroom and shot herself in the head. Svetlana would inherit her mother's gentle nature." Omg XD

  • @rosemarygrabowska9949
    @rosemarygrabowska9949 5 років тому +660

    True story: there is an epic painting of Stalin and his "favourites" that was delayed for *years* because Stalin kept killing/exiling/gulaging the others in the painting while the artist was working on it.

    • @llamaryder1
      @llamaryder1 5 років тому +18

      Do you have a source for this I could read? It kinda just sounds like propaganda but I could be wrong

    • @rosemarygrabowska9949
      @rosemarygrabowska9949 5 років тому +81

      I saw the painting in 2005 when I was doing a study abroad in Russia, but it was the museum guide who told me the story, so I must admit I don't know that there's any evidence to support it. But it seemed like something that would happen in Stalinist Russia

    • @neal2399
      @neal2399 4 роки тому +74

      That’s the most in-character thing I’ve ever heard about Stalin. Like a darker version of that “Friendship ended with MUDASIR; now SALMAN is my best friend” meme

    • @ViquelOoste
      @ViquelOoste 4 роки тому +9

      @@llamaryder1 there were indeed painting of him with his collaborators, compared with later versions where they were removed one by one along the years, but didn't knew a painting was delayed

    • @MayPastel
      @MayPastel 4 роки тому +2

      Can I please know what's it called?

  • @landscapedetective4064
    @landscapedetective4064 5 років тому +1203

    I was an 'extra' on The Death of Stalin. Spent several very hot days during the summer of 2016 in The Mansion House, London (Stalin, lying in state) and in Shoreditch Town Hall (the hastily reassembled concert). Because we were doing a summer-for-winter shoot, all the extras had to wear heavy clothing...and we sweated like pigs. During the 'Stalin lying in State' scene, we all had cool packs under our clothes to stop us from overheating under the lights. I even had one under my cloth cap. We entered that hall, shuffled past the coffin, then left by a rear door (grabbed a quick drink of water) and joined the queue again...then back into the hall for another round of the same. Two extras actually fainted from the heat! Aye...it's a tough job, but someone's got to do it! LOL

    • @royblekman8186
      @royblekman8186 5 років тому +66

      landscape detective thats awesome!
      Hope it was worth it, i myself love the movie.

    • @adis4320
      @adis4320 5 років тому +4

      [X]

    • @Michael-yu2yk
      @Michael-yu2yk 5 років тому +51

      @Billy The Banini r/ihavereddit

    • @neine999
      @neine999 5 років тому +21

      @Billy The Banini r/itmostdefinitelyisarealsubreddithereisthelink www.reddit.com/r/ihavereddit/

    • @stevenb450
      @stevenb450 5 років тому +55

      Billy The Banini how is that a r/quityourbullshit? He was an extra in a movie that has a TON of extras and it’s not like this is the only movie with extras to exist.

  • @mikeshockley3945
    @mikeshockley3945 6 місяців тому +1

    This is outstanding. Well done! I am anxious to see more of you videos. I’ll be showing this to my sons. Excellent!

  • @keith_root
    @keith_root Рік тому +9

    I waited months to watch this video, until I found time to watch the movie. I'm glad I did. It gave remarkable context to the story you came here to tell. Thank you.

  • @mr.s2005
    @mr.s2005 4 роки тому +1132

    the brilliance of Stalin.....getting rid of the doctors and making his own people so scared they waited to even see if he was okay.

    • @FilipCordas
      @FilipCordas 4 роки тому +28

      But let's be honest we have to remember that the 'historical accounts' are accounts by people that survived de-Stalinization process the 'good guy' in the movie old boy Niki did, am not saying Stalin was not horrible just that Khrushchev was just as bad.

    • @darkomarkovic9323
      @darkomarkovic9323 4 роки тому +72

      @@FilipCordas Khrushchev was not anywhere near as smart and ruthless as Stalin, compared to Stalin he was a nice guy, Stalin for all his faults was genius, Khrushchev was not, but yeah he was also not where near as bad as Stalin was

    • @TemplarOnHigh
      @TemplarOnHigh 4 роки тому +35

      @@FilipCordas Nikita was no saint, but relative to the level of terror that the Party imparted under Stalin and in the '20's, pressure was greatly reduced. We have incompetence, death, war, and danger throughout the rest of the USSR's history - but there aren't waves of terror where millions of people died in a given year on account of internal purges and cleansing. The GULAG remains open, but it never regains the maw of slave labor it trapped (is that the right word?). With Stalin no longer claiming the worker were more effective than they would have been had they been free and Beria dead, the system starts to look more "normal."
      Could "A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich" have been published in *Но́вый Ми́р* of all places under Stalin? Hell no. Now did they crack down after the reforms went too far? Sure and sure Stalin's dead body made a great straw man onto which Niki tried to paint all the crimes of the past, but that doesn't mean that Stalin wasn't responsible for a great deal of them.

    • @theonetojump
      @theonetojump 4 роки тому +3

      Karma bit him in the ass.

    • @FilipCordas
      @FilipCordas 4 роки тому +3

      @@TemplarOnHigh Yee I don't like this western communist rewriting of history. O it was only Stalin and Beria that where the problem if only Trocki took power none of the terrible stuff would have happened. Everyone in that system is to blame for all that not just one man and that includes Niki. What was happening during the purges is that all the party members saw an opportunity to get rid of people they didn't like or had a political rivalry. And afterwards Nikita made up stories how it was all just Stalins doing and the western media ,Hollywood and academia started pushing that because a lot of them where financed by the SSSR. Same thing you see with China today with Vinny Xi Pooh and Froggy Zemin.

  • @yugom488mmmauser2
    @yugom488mmmauser2 5 років тому +475

    "YOU'RE NOT EVEN A PERSON; YOU'RE A TESTICLE!" aaaaaaaaaaaah that still makes me crack up

    • @job3rg
      @job3rg 5 років тому +8

      How old are you?
      I'm twenty.... nine.

    • @stillsalty947
      @stillsalty947 5 років тому +9

      I liked the scene, where he spit on himself

    • @CorbCorbin
      @CorbCorbin 5 років тому +8

      For some fundamentalist Christians, a testicle is the place where billions of souls await placement.

    • @lostbladder
      @lostbladder 5 років тому +1

      I got a kick out of that as well.

    • @eval_is_evil
      @eval_is_evil 5 років тому

      Lol ikr ? In my country (Slovenia) ,in our southern dialect there is a word(insult) "kojon/kujon" which derives from the italian word "coglione" which literally means testicle. It denotes someone being a moron ,being pathetic,being a coward... Maybe russians use a similar insult for pathetic/scared men and they translated it directly? I love it though because it is hilarious.

  • @Csp499
    @Csp499 11 місяців тому +42

    When thinking about the Russian perspective on and response to The Death of Stalin, one thing that came to mind was "what if someone made a satirical comedy about 9/11? Wouldn't I, as an American, find that offensive?". Then I remembered that's basically what Team America: World Police was, and on top of that, it was satirizing an event that was actively unfolding, rather than something that happened several decades before. And yet, at the time it was some of the funniest shit we'd seen, even as it made light of an issue we'd spend the better part of the next two decades grappling with (even if we didn't know it then).

    • @alexpotts6520
      @alexpotts6520 11 місяців тому +19

      It's worth remembering that when people say "Russians find this offensive" what they really mean is "the Russian *government* finds this offensive."

    • @what8562
      @what8562 10 місяців тому +8

      Are you out of your mind!?
      How is the death of a brutal dictator anything close to 9/11!?
      Aside from Stalinist, both Russians and Rossiyans love the movie

    • @HauntedXXXPancake
      @HauntedXXXPancake 6 місяців тому +2

      @@what8562 Yeah, comparing those two things
      are as bananas, as saying "Team America" was about 9/11.

    • @IphigeniaAtAulis
      @IphigeniaAtAulis Місяць тому

      Film Actors Guild.

  • @jonahfalcon1970
    @jonahfalcon1970 Рік тому +4

    The line that always kills me: "Fuck me, Georgy's eyes really do follow you around the crapper. It's weird."

  • @Mwraf
    @Mwraf 3 роки тому +719

    This movie like a rated R version of The Office it’s funny as hell.

    • @MaxwellAerialPhotography
      @MaxwellAerialPhotography 2 роки тому +41

      The director of this movie did a series called in the thick of it, which follows a British governmental department and the prime ministers enforcer, the legendary Malcolm Tucker. It’s basically R-rated Office.

  • @wublesmoop6125
    @wublesmoop6125 5 років тому +419

    I'm surprised there aren't more historical comedies like Death of Stalin. Sometimes you can't make up this shit, sometimes the history is hilarious simply as it is

    • @blondbraid7986
      @blondbraid7986 5 років тому +98

      Exactly. I also hate this mindset that history should only ever be portrayed as a bunch of super serious guys with constipated facial expressions and everything was grey and brown.
      Sure, history has it's fair share of tragedy, but there are also so many weird and awesome things that's been unfairly ignored, like "Mad Jack" Churchill, who brought a broadsword to WW2 battlefields, or Cecilia Vasa, who was a princess and leader of a big pirate fleet. Why can't people like them get their own movies?

    • @HisameArtwork
      @HisameArtwork 5 років тому +50

      I'll probably watch a comedy with my grand kids of the 2016 American election some day.

    • @Usammityduzntafraidofanythin
      @Usammityduzntafraidofanythin 5 років тому +30

      History is full of comedy, both tragic and weird.

    • @creativeusername6453
      @creativeusername6453 5 років тому +35

      A comedy about the first crusades would be amazing. Shit reads like a Monty Python movie

    • @Clos93
      @Clos93 5 років тому +6

      Anybody interested in comedic historical stories, ought to check out drunk history, pretty hilarious show that comes on comedy central.

  • @billie0429
    @billie0429 8 місяців тому +1

    One of the best documentary Ive ever seen in my life, thank you very much

  • @carlmanson6634
    @carlmanson6634 Рік тому +2

    This is an amazing film. Such great insights that only lead to further reading, esp after your appraisal. Stalingrad 1993 deserves greater focus if you are still doing these, one of the best.

    • @zetetick395
      @zetetick395 11 місяців тому

      Yeah, we watched *The Death of Stalin* (2018) in a black-comedy double bill with *Jojo Rabbit* (2019) - A great, memorable movie night!
      Funny, moving, and gave us lots to talk about. 😸_👍

  • @JamesBond-ir1yj
    @JamesBond-ir1yj 4 роки тому +606

    *Crash Noise*, Stalin falls to floor
    First Officer: Should we investigate
    Second Officer: You better STFU before you get us both killed!
    Clearly a Darth Vader and Palpatine style of leadership here

    • @gastonbell108
      @gastonbell108 3 роки тому +28

      It's like the King Midas myth. "Aw shit! I really need those doctors now, can I un-kill them?"

    • @Kaarl_Mills
      @Kaarl_Mills 3 роки тому +6

      "you guys are busy, I'll come back"

    • @pheresy1367
      @pheresy1367 3 роки тому +3

      Yeah.... we all know who these people are. You can see them coming from a mile away.... It's the same playbook over and over again. But still, they rise to power... could happen even in the USA.... so I've realized from watching recent events.

    • @mr.mangles8730
      @mr.mangles8730 3 роки тому +1

      @@pheresy1367 ehh idk it could for sure but most of the time even with trump americans still vehemently disavow any military actions that try to control the people hell a bunch of lunatics just stormed the Capitol over some dumb shit imagine how nuts they would go over someone trying to take their guns away and aslong as americans have guns I dont see anyone rising to having the powers of a dictator they would have to win the hearts of the people and with almost always near half the population disliking the current president whether they're Democrat or Republican it would have to be through a civil war which I dont see anytime in the near future

    • @koreratman329
      @koreratman329 3 роки тому +3

      "do you hear that screaming? Think we should check up?"
      "Unless you want to be zapped with force lightning shut the fug up"

  • @wolfjedisamuel
    @wolfjedisamuel 4 роки тому +2301

    *History Buff:* _"The Soviet Union fizzled away..."_
    *Later*
    _"Russian Cinema is raided by police for screening "Death of Stalin"_
    *Me:* _Still a bit of cinder left..._

    • @miguelgamez8251
      @miguelgamez8251 3 роки тому +66

      Underrated comment

    • @liamweaver2944
      @liamweaver2944 3 роки тому +82

      wolfjedisamuel Well, if we’re talking fire here, even if a flame fizzles away, there is still a chance of reignition. It’s why firefighters go through with poles and hooks, looking through ashes to find potential ignition sources.

    • @wolflord8117
      @wolflord8117 3 роки тому +3

      Holy shit. Wasn't aware you made comments. Btw a big fan of your work.

    • @drartemisa21
      @drartemisa21 3 роки тому +1

      Best boy, best comment.

    • @gastonbell108
      @gastonbell108 3 роки тому +31

      Cultures don't really change; they evolve somewhat, but the customs and norms of the population largely stay the same.
      In Russia today, you're liable to get punched in the face on a public street for criticizing Putin, and nobody will care and nobody will get arrested. That's just how Russia has always been, and it's how it'll always be. The idea that you can control a society without secret police and heavy restrictions on speech is like crazy talk to them.
      You can strap a veneer of democracy on a grim, autocratic 3rd world dystopia and it'll still be a grim, autocratic 3rd world dystopia.

  • @CoralCopperHead
    @CoralCopperHead Рік тому +24

    Now if only a _certain someone_ in charge of a _state that has its main government in the same location as the previous one_ could suffer the same fate. I'm not saying who, just someone.

  • @ZombieGrandpa
    @ZombieGrandpa 11 місяців тому +1

    Will be renting this! Thank you!

  • @bananawaltz8807
    @bananawaltz8807 4 роки тому +705

    I haven’t see a comment for this so here it goes: Stalin knew of Beria’s many rape accounts, and was once horrified to realize his daughter was with Beria. When he realized it, he immediately phoned her to never be alone with him. Stalin was afraid of someone (but mostly because he doesn’t want his daughter raped).

    • @MyHentaiGirlNeko
      @MyHentaiGirlNeko 3 роки тому +126

      @Dmitry Terek even a thief ain't dumb enough to steal right next to a police officer

    • @theplaybunnyarcade3375
      @theplaybunnyarcade3375 3 роки тому +184

      @Dmitry Terek to be fair, there's a bit of a difference between "my daughter is willingly being a slut" and "some creep cornered her and raped her"
      It's slightly odd to me that you didn't see the difference already?

    • @makisxatzimixas2372
      @makisxatzimixas2372 3 роки тому +5

      @@theplaybunnyarcade3375 Both of which he answered to. Are you sure you ain't low-key virtue signaling?

    • @meh92082
      @meh92082 3 роки тому +48

      Stalin was afraid of nearly everybody. He was paranoid everyone was out to get him so he killed everyone for no reason.

    • @Alf763
      @Alf763 3 роки тому +25

      My favourite Stalin quote was to Hitler “you have Himmler, we have Beria”

  • @nqinadlamini
    @nqinadlamini 5 років тому +448

    "You are not even a man. You are a testicle". Good grief that was hilarious.
    Thank you, I will look this movie up.
    LOL

    • @piggypoo
      @piggypoo 5 років тому +2

      the moment I heard that line in the video I paused and came to scoll down the comments.

    • @Lethgar_Smith
      @Lethgar_Smith 5 років тому +3

      I watched it on a plane coming back from England. Lady sitting next to me wondered what the hell I was laughing so hard at.

    • @Psycorde
      @Psycorde 5 років тому +1

      Stalin's son in the movie is hilarious in general

    • @JayLeePoe
      @JayLeePoe 5 років тому +2

      Leave his brain alone! How old are you?
      Doctor: I'm old
      You're not old!
      You're not even a person! You're a testicle!
      [cut]
      You're made mostly of hair!

    • @edithmaclarky8955
      @edithmaclarky8955 5 років тому

      piggypoo I was at the exact same moment when I saw the comment

  • @lucavalerio3336
    @lucavalerio3336 Рік тому +4

    I kinda don’t blame vassily for being a drunk. I mean, if Joseph Stalin was my father I would probably turn into an alcohoolic too.

  • @cosmojonesmusic
    @cosmojonesmusic 2 роки тому

    What a fantastic companion to the film. Well done!! Thank you. 👏👏👏

  • @the_DarkSoul
    @the_DarkSoul 4 роки тому +1487

    Stalins son: HOW OLD ARE YOU?
    Poor dude: IM..... OLD
    Stalins son: YOU'RE NOT OLD
    Stalins son: AND YOU ARE NOT EVEN A PERSON, YOU ARE A TESTICLE
    Poor testicle dude: "scared for his life"

    • @Mate-vg2ft
      @Mate-vg2ft 4 роки тому +6

      The Dark Soul that's *nuts*

    • @kubikkuratko188
      @kubikkuratko188 4 роки тому +22

      Stalins son: YOURE MOSTLY MADE OF HAIR!

    • @patrioticamerican6414
      @patrioticamerican6414 4 роки тому +2

      The Dark Soul what time stamp is that

    • @braedonlackovic1776
      @braedonlackovic1776 4 роки тому +3

      i lost it when I watched that part

    • @kuyakyel324
      @kuyakyel324 4 роки тому +2

      Stalin son: yeah but they have the machine filled with American lies.

  • @knoxwatson5360
    @knoxwatson5360 5 років тому +639

    "Publicly condemn Stalin, in what would be known as the secret speech" lol

    • @thebalticmarxist-leninist1333
      @thebalticmarxist-leninist1333 4 роки тому +12

      Perhaps the most fraudulent and historically illiterate piece of propaganda ever known to man.

    • @tdubya97
      @tdubya97 4 роки тому +51

      @@thebalticmarxist-leninist1333 HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHHAHAHAHAHAHA

    • @Yautah
      @Yautah 4 роки тому +5

      Soviet Russia is complicated.

    • @snorf525
      @snorf525 4 роки тому +25

      Yautah no it’s not, here’s one word to describe it: bad

    • @thebalticmarxist-leninist1333
      @thebalticmarxist-leninist1333 4 роки тому

      @Buttrape Bill Yup, he wasn't.

  • @DoughBoy45
    @DoughBoy45 11 місяців тому +6

    Single handedly one of the funniest movies I’ve ever seen. I waited for it to come out in theaters and it never did 😂

  • @kavenkruber532
    @kavenkruber532 2 роки тому +2

    Loved this film, so excited for the sequel if you know what I mean.
    @History Buffs your videos are always of the highest order.

    • @zetetick395
      @zetetick395 11 місяців тому

      Yeah, we watched *The Death of Stalin* (2018) in a black-comedy double bill with *Jojo Rabbit* (2019) - A great, memorable movie night!
      Funny, moving, and gave us lots to talk about. 😸_👍

  • @Sam_on_YouTube
    @Sam_on_YouTube 5 років тому +560

    He named himself Joe Steel? That's a porn name.

    • @j_bucko567
      @j_bucko567 5 років тому +47

      Let's just say, all russian women were starving to get a mouthful of that dick

    • @DrCruel
      @DrCruel 5 років тому +4

      Is because Joe Steel is sex legend. Fuck everyone.

    • @mazimadu
      @mazimadu 5 років тому +3

      Lol that's apt

    • @CorbCorbin
      @CorbCorbin 5 років тому +10

      In private, he liked to be called "Big" Joey Steel. The ballerinas loved it. 😋

    • @CorbCorbin
      @CorbCorbin 5 років тому +3

      Red_Head _Redemption
      They were starving so bad, that any animals dick and balls would've been a delicacy.

  • @arthurjones127
    @arthurjones127 5 років тому +745

    "You can't just kill all of your enemys"
    "That's were your wrong kido"

    • @martinmortyry7444
      @martinmortyry7444 5 років тому +37

      You can't just kill all your enemies
      and allies
      and close friends
      and random people

    • @ShortArmOfGod
      @ShortArmOfGod 5 років тому +13

      "You can't just use poor grammar."
      "That's where your wrong, kiddo."

    • @ShrekStoliosis
      @ShrekStoliosis 5 років тому +14

      “we can’t just use you’re, the correct tense”
      “That’s where you’re wrong kiddo”

    • @SaltyWound
      @SaltyWound 4 роки тому

      @Spencer Proctor His grammar isn't much better.........

    • @sniper_rifle_3009
      @sniper_rifle_3009 4 роки тому

      *you’re

  • @LateNightAshes
    @LateNightAshes 11 місяців тому

    This video is excellent sir. VERY informative & engaging.
    Cheers.

  • @laurentco
    @laurentco Рік тому

    Great supplement to a great film! Thoroughly enjoyed both, particularly the fight between the two commentators at the end! LOL

  • @oogityboogity6644
    @oogityboogity6644 2 роки тому +426

    The unanimous voting scene is scary realistic on how that type of peer pressure works

    • @CHFafard
      @CHFafard 2 роки тому +69

      "Carried... u..." Everyone slowly raises their hands "Nan... im... ous... ly..."

    • @zetetick395
      @zetetick395 11 місяців тому +6

      Ring the bell
      the dogs will salivate

    • @alexpotts6520
      @alexpotts6520 11 місяців тому

      Well, peer pressure plus living for decades in a totally paranoid society where saying the wrong thing could get you killed...

    • @marsultor6131
      @marsultor6131 8 місяців тому +4

      It was also quite common, once a majority seemed to have formed, the rest voted along with them. Even Erich Honecker (Dicator of the GDR) voted for his own dismissal.

    • @Abysalss
      @Abysalss 7 місяців тому +4

      Also pretty accurate for how Stalinism worked, where when you were the dissent you voted with the majority after it was clear which was which so there was no “factionalism”

  • @maceface2892
    @maceface2892 3 роки тому +1153

    I don't feel bad at all for laughing at his death. It was what he did while alive that depresses me

    • @lucavalerio3336
      @lucavalerio3336 3 роки тому +16

      True.

    • @ConnorNotyerbidness
      @ConnorNotyerbidness 2 роки тому +111

      Stalin probably wanted to die like a hero
      Justice had him die lying in his own piss, without help due to how he alienated and subjugated all around him
      Thats hilarious.

    • @cookiefaceyt2002
      @cookiefaceyt2002 2 роки тому +41

      I Don't feel even close to bad laughing about Stalins death. I am from eastern Europe.

    • @Helmutlozzi
      @Helmutlozzi 2 роки тому +50

      Communism IS depressing. But Stalins death was a flicker of joy in the long tragic story of communism.

    • @localdude3702
      @localdude3702 2 роки тому +3

      @@Helmutlozzi Cringe

  • @iloveshred
    @iloveshred Рік тому +4

    Did youtube turn the volume off to part of this? The part just before he dies and his staff won't go in the room is silent.

  • @Colten_Hyatt
    @Colten_Hyatt 11 місяців тому +1

    I discovered this movie from this video. Now one of my favorite movies of all time. Thank you

  • @cole445
    @cole445 5 років тому +347

    "How old are you?"
    "I'm...old.."

    • @anthonyeaton9049
      @anthonyeaton9049 5 років тому +42

      "YOU'RE NOT OLD!!!"

    • @verrelrafiano6564
      @verrelrafiano6564 5 років тому +20

      "You're not even a human"
      "You're a testicle"

    • @stickiedmin6508
      @stickiedmin6508 5 років тому +13

      After Zhukov, Vassily was easily my favourite character. His lines were hilarious.
      "My father will have you saddled and ridden to Siberia you rude fucking pies!"
      "Play better you clattering fannies!"
      Pure gold.

    • @np7736
      @np7736 5 років тому +17

      "WHAT PLANE CRASH?!? Soviet planes don't crash!"

    • @stickiedmin6508
      @stickiedmin6508 5 років тому +8

      "Hairy monsters in coats have scooped out my father's brain and sent it to _America!"_

  • @jacob4920
    @jacob4920 3 роки тому +2395

    "The Death of Stalin" might actually be the single most brilliant piece of historical fiction ever put to screen. Not only in how LITTLE of it was actually falsified, but also in how the comedy was so brilliantly performed, by all actors/actresses, to accurately, if not buffoonishly, portray each Soviet figure.
    This film was hilarious AND educational! That is a hard accomplishment to actually make, but this film pulls it off, by God!

    • @gjmac7247
      @gjmac7247 2 роки тому +52

      One of the funniest film's I've seen, also one of the most frightening knowing how close to the truth it is.

    • @ButHerMama
      @ButHerMama 2 роки тому +13

      You ever watched jojo rabbit?
      It reminds me of that movie

    • @Malt454
      @Malt454 2 роки тому +26

      Unfortunately, it's one of the least accurate "historical" movies I've seen in quite some time - and it's painful to see/hear how many people now feel "informed" about this period when it's so far from the truth. It's decent satire, but poor history.

    • @Definitelydusky
      @Definitelydusky 2 роки тому +1

      Would’ve been better with realistic accents, don’t know why Russians are speaking with British accents

    • @arnoldbowling7904
      @arnoldbowling7904 Рік тому +7

      100% agree. historically not bad funny as hell.

  • @tyvankenyon4964
    @tyvankenyon4964 Рік тому +9

    Does the audio cut out for anyone else at 16 minutes?

  • @darkredash2317
    @darkredash2317 17 днів тому

    Damn that was an awesome video. Awesome job dude.

  • @theweirdo7571
    @theweirdo7571 4 роки тому +191

    *"YOU'RE NOT EVEN A PERSON, YOU'RE A TESTICLE!"*

  • @thegreatswordmaster6485
    @thegreatswordmaster6485 4 роки тому +318

    "Today we will be having a laugh at the death of Stalin"
    KGB: Hol' up

    • @eustache_dauger
      @eustache_dauger 4 роки тому +16

      The NKVD wants to know your location

    • @kgb5979
      @kgb5979 4 роки тому +9

      NKVD was in the Time of Stalin comrade. But still tho we gonna have to "ask him some questions"

    • @WD-zk6fg
      @WD-zk6fg 4 роки тому +5

      FSB: ...
      MSS: ...
      Kim Jung IL: I'm so ronery!

  • @talesfromthemoribund702
    @talesfromthemoribund702 11 місяців тому +1

    Excellent video. Thanks

  • @ripwednesdayadams
    @ripwednesdayadams 8 місяців тому +5

    I love the little old lady who was basically like “I lived during that time, I’m fine with it.“ I know I’m an American, but I didn’t feel like the film mocked the Soviet people- the butt of the jokes were people like Stalin and Beria who deserve to be mocked relentlessly. As a viewer, I felt sympathy for the Soviet people living under a tyrant. (I also think the Soviet people deserve the credit for WWII in spite of Stalin considering everything he did.) This movie was hilarious and I enjoyed it thoroughly.

  • @AHersheyHere
    @AHersheyHere 5 років тому +695

    Russia: "This movie shows our country in a bad, oppresive light!"
    Also Russia: "Send police to shut down a theater for showing the movie."
    Stalin is long dead but, his shadow lives on in Russia.

    • @PanzerIVAE
      @PanzerIVAE 5 років тому +38

      The reasons behind the ban seems to lie deeper than it shining a bad light upon the Soviet days of Russia.
      Another UA-camr named The Cynical Historian did his own historical analysis of the movie a while back and he explained pretty well on reasons why Russia would ban it

    • @johnwills1748
      @johnwills1748 5 років тому +7

      Just let them do what they do.
      It's an irrelevant topic as to why they banned the movie a country should have such authority and not be lambasted for it.
      Not like they're being kept in the dark from the atrocities either it's all still very attainable information.

    • @Saiyan_Goku
      @Saiyan_Goku 5 років тому +1

      Andrew Hershberger lol

    • @Oddricm
      @Oddricm 5 років тому +71

      @@PanzerIVAE Personally, I think it's less the Soviet days of Russia and more a bad light on Russian leaders in general. If you can mock Stalin, you can mock Putin.

    • @tigermunky
      @tigermunky 5 років тому +48

      The communist party is quite small in Russia, but they make a huge amount of noise. They kicked off massively over the film.
      The film was actually allowed by the government's film board, but so many people got butt hurt about the film's existence that they caved in at the last moment and pulled the film. Stalin's legacy is something of a tricky issue for the Russian government. There are still a great many people in Russia who grew up under Stalinism and who think that Stalin was the greatest man on Earth. The government doesn't want to alienate these people by outright saying that Stalin was a dick. Khrushchev did that and it earned him a fair amount of ire. So instead, the government just leaves the whole topic alone, bringing it up when it suits them.
      Allowing this film to be shown simply wasn't worth the hassle they were going to get from the hardcore Stalin fans in Russia, so it was easier to ban it. As I mentioned before, the government actually initially allowed this film to be shown. It was only after complaints from certain members of the public that they banned it.

  • @d.s.parentsr6502
    @d.s.parentsr6502 5 років тому +661

    The accents don't bother me at all. Just like in 'Amadeus' it allows the actors to focus more on their characters.
    Moreover, Steve Buscemi, Jeffrey Tambor and Michael (f**king) Palin? This is a movie that I have to see!

    • @d.s.parentsr6502
      @d.s.parentsr6502 5 років тому +22

      Bought it. Watched it. LOVED IT!

    • @benjaminbierley2074
      @benjaminbierley2074 4 роки тому +4

      All star cast hands down

    • @edwardzero9275
      @edwardzero9275 4 роки тому +2

      Same, I especially loved Zhukov and Nikita

    • @jonL88
      @jonL88 4 роки тому

      Or Valkyrie! People keep complaining Tom Cruise and co. should have spoken in a German accent

    • @Quallenkrauler
      @Quallenkrauler 4 роки тому +4

      Yeah, I started watching this video without having seen the movie, stopped watching in the middle because I decided that I HAD to see see it first. And then Michael Palin shows up. Needless to say, I had a blast. Buscemi, Isaacs and Palin were amazing! The rest of the cast too, of course, but I loved those three. Especially Isaac's "Fuck you, I'm an untouchable war hero, I can just punch Stalin's son and get away with it!" attitude. :D

  • @CoCoNutShovel
    @CoCoNutShovel 7 місяців тому +4

    “No more navy jokes”😂😂

  • @SuaveJoker
    @SuaveJoker 11 днів тому +1

    I love when the Grand Inquisitor punches the Grand Inquisitor in this movie 😂