The Battle for Moscow AGRESSION, Part One | WAR MOVIE

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  • Опубліковано 23 гру 2021
  • Film I: Agression
    Part One: In the aftermath of the victory in France, Hitler decides to attack the Soviet Union and places his hopes on field marshal Fedor von Bock, commander of Army Group Center, for the capture of Moscow. Ilse Stöbe, Rudolf von Scheliha and Richard Sorge inform of the danger, but the Soviet intelligence dismisses their warnings. Zhukov is concerned that the army is ill-prepared; Pavlov decries him as a fear-monger. The Red Army officers are convinced that in the event of an invasion, they would immediately counter-attack. On 22 June 1941 Germany launches Operation Barbarossa, overwhelming the Soviets.
    Part Two: • The Battle for Moscow ...
    Film II: Typhoon
    Part One: • The Battle for Moscow ...
    Part Two: • The Battle for Moscow ...
    Soviet two-part war film, presenting a dramatized account of the 1941 Battle of Moscow and the events preceding it. The films were a Soviet-East German-Czechoslovak-Vietnamese co-production directed by Yuri Ozerov who also wrote the script. It was made in time for the 40th anniversary of the Allied victory over Nazi Germany and the 20th anniversary of the proclamation of the Victory Day holiday and Moscow's declaration as a Hero City.
    Year of production: 1985
    Directed by: Ozerov Yuri
    Writed by: Ozerov Yuri
    Music: Pakhmutova Alexandra
    Operators: Chernykh Igor, Gusev Vladimir
    Set Designers: Lapshina Tatiana, Myagkov Alexander
    Starring: Shmeleva Irina, Prygunov Lev, Yakovlev Yuri, Yankovsky Rostislav, Kulagin Leonid
    #Battle_of_Moscow #Yuri_Ozerov #War_movie
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 434

  • @carlosmontero6783
    @carlosmontero6783 Рік тому +48

    agradeceré poder ver esta película histórica subtitulada en español. Admiro y respeto al pueblo soviético que defendió a sus repúblicas con valor, heroísmo y grandes sacrificios y que vencieron al ejército asesino hitleriano. Saludos desde Barcelona en España

    • @user-ov7zx9bo2c
      @user-ov7zx9bo2c 7 місяців тому +1

      yes

    • @user-cg3em8qv8x
      @user-cg3em8qv8x 4 місяці тому +1

      Hola from Russia❤

    • @hectorfprez
      @hectorfprez 11 днів тому

      Bueno, bueno... los aliados no fueron mejores, 3 millones de bengalíes asesinados por los piratas, por ejemplo...

  • @alexstrazhnikov5365
    @alexstrazhnikov5365 Рік тому +15

    Большое спасибо , Карену Георгиевичу Шахназарову за развитие этого ютюб канала. Теперь есть , что смотреть !!!!!!!

  • @alexmunoz6554
    @alexmunoz6554 2 роки тому +18

    One of the best movies that i saw of Mosfilm i love it

  • @borisaskoldt1410
    @borisaskoldt1410 8 місяців тому +1

    Шедевр, Советского КИНО !
    It's a Masterpiece 📽️🎬🎞️🎥 . 📽️🎬🎞️🎥. 👏👏👏☝️☝️🎭⭐🎭⭐🎭⭐🎭⭐👍💯🔥💥🔥💥🔥💥🔥💥👍💯. Amazing Film Movie Masterpiece 📽️🎬🎞️🎥. !!!

  • @rafaelmartinez6784
    @rafaelmartinez6784 Рік тому +27

    Very interesting the espionage portion of this movie with "Sorge" appearance at the German embassy in Tokyo before Barbarossa invasion. In my opinion, he was one of the main responsible of the Russian victory at the end of the war. Thank you for this beautiful show. Can't hardly wait to watch part 2.

    • @rescuepetsrule6842
      @rescuepetsrule6842 Місяць тому

      Stalin should have acted on Sorge's warning about Hitler's boys invading, eventually giving the exact date... along with warnings by a lot of others. The man never had a problem with getting millions of "his people" killed. Sorge must have been the slyest spy ever.

  • @JohnSunCanada
    @JohnSunCanada 2 роки тому +39

    I watched the movie when I was in the University around 1988. Still the best war movie I ever watched by 2021. China and USSR started to end their hostility in late 1980s. So the movie was shown in China country wide. However these heroes' fatherland was no more just 3 years later, so shock!

    • @Bolitadewien
      @Bolitadewien Рік тому

      @missions Are you being sarcastic? Why?

    • @Ukraineaissance2014
      @Ukraineaissance2014 Рік тому +1

      Watch Come and See. Its on this youtube channel. Greatest war film ever made, generally agreed with by anybody with a brain

    • @iliapopovich
      @iliapopovich 6 місяців тому

      Cina-numero uno

    • @GreenknightBrola
      @GreenknightBrola 6 місяців тому

      I loved the moment when the young soldier reacted to the tanks coming out of the river, and the Muskovian Girl realizing the Pink Clouds where the asbestos filling of her friends and families houses. Thrilling stuff.

  • @controlleddemolition9112
    @controlleddemolition9112 2 роки тому +35

    I see a lot of comments about the German-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact and the Soviet invasions of Finland and Poland not being mentioned. I'm not sure what viewers expected from a Soviet film.
    I grew up in the US being given the false impression that the Western Allies won WW2 in Europe after D-Day. That's how it was sold time and time again. The Red Army's primary role in this victory has been downplayed. Sometimes, it's hard to tell "turth" from "spin". Spin has an element of truth in it. If not for British and US bombing and other military intervention in Africa and later, the Soviets would have faced an even more formidable Wehrmacht, but most objective historians would concede that the outcome of the war in Europe was decided in the East before D-Day. It was decided at the gates of Moscow,, though some view Stalingrad as "the turning point". I'm not sure, in hindsight, that there was a turning point. Germany's eventual defeat might have been virtually inevitable. They achieved or exceeded every objective in the first two or three months of Barbarossa, yet could not "seal the deal" at Moscow or Leningrad. Hitler thought all he had to do was kick the door in, like he had in the Battle of France, and claim victory. Obviously, he underestimated the Soviets.

    • @controlleddemolition9112
      @controlleddemolition9112 2 роки тому +12

      @@robertsmith2227 Agreed. The Red Army was likely to march all the way to the Atlantic Wall if the Aliies didn't launch the D-Day invasion. Some in the US think Lend Lease "saved" the Soviets. That's a reach. The total cost of Lend Lease to the US was about 50 Billion of which about 40 went to the Uk and 11 went to the USSR. That 11 Billion was just a few percent of Soviet military expenditures during WW2. I think they could have managed without Lend Lease, but the task would have been much more challenging if the British and US didn't keep some of the Wehrmacht busy with bombing and the initiatives in Africa and Italy..
      We saw what the Red Army could do in 1945 in Manchuria. They were so effective that the US decided to drop the big ones to keep them from taking over in Korea and in the north islands of Japan.

    • @danielkokal8819
      @danielkokal8819 Рік тому +3

      Hitler underestimated his enemies (US & USSR) and over estimated his allies (Italy & Japan)
      Wermacht was a one trick pony, relying solely on quick strike victory with weapons they
      had "on the shelf". Once quick strike failed, as in USSR, it became a war of attrition that Germany
      was not suited for. could not replace tanks and men faster than the soviets. dumbass.
      even with a shitty plan going in, he almost made it, except for shitty decisions he made on the
      way. being led by a corporal.

    • @controlleddemolition9112
      @controlleddemolition9112 Рік тому +4

      @@danielkokal8819 No doubt that Germany had to win a quick victory. They could never match the Allies resources and production. As for Hitler, he had both contempt and disdain for his enemies. He actually believed his own "Master Race" rhetoric.

    • @danielr5637
      @danielr5637 Рік тому

      Hitler need diesel fuel. And lots of it. Then maybe the war would have been different

    • @Messor-oh2pw
      @Messor-oh2pw Рік тому +4

      Barbarossa had some success, but it's a mistake to think it went according to plan. In reality, from the very first days, the plans of the Germans and their allies cracked. The defeat of Germany would have been predetermined if the Western Allies really wanted to defeat Germany with all their might. Already in 1942, the superiority of the forces of the anti-Hitler coalition was 3 to 1 compared to the Axis, and it was very easy to end the war already in 1942. But it was beneficial for the Allies to wait until the Nazis and the Soviets killed each other, and at that time to accumulate forces themselves in order to at the moment of the maximum weakening of the Nazis and the Soviets, to spare for themselves all the fruits of the Soviet victory, using the capabilities of their maximum increased military strength, and the impossibility of the exhausted Soviets to win a new war immediately after the end of the previous war, if the Soviets do not agree with the Anglo-American dominance in the post-war world. The only factor why the West did not conclude an alliance with Germany against the USSR before the end of the war was the need for the help of the USSR against Japan. There are lies in the West about the allegedly decisive moral impact of nuclear bombings. This is complete nonsense. Even despite the fact that sooner or later Japan would most likely capitulate to the United States, but this would require the United States too much time, human and material losses. The entry of the USSR into the war became a factor that the United States needed. And also the liquidation of the Comintern. This is the only reason why a separate peace and an alliance with any fascist government in Germany after the liquidation of Hitler (the liquidation of Hitler was necessary for the public opinion of the West, the fascist system itself suited the West perfectly) were not put into practice, despite the Crossword and Sunrise operations. The thing is that the USSR had to defeat not only Germany, but also Japan.

  • @brunovrancic8330
    @brunovrancic8330 2 роки тому +17

    Thank You for this excellent movie! Please give us more.

  • @canderousordo8271
    @canderousordo8271 Рік тому +9

    I like how the film doesn’t glorify Stalin and the soviet leadership, showing the mistakes they made despite being mostly competent

    • @Chiefs_fan1595
      @Chiefs_fan1595 28 днів тому

      I mean it was definitely a choice to leave out the non aggression pact they signed with Germany before they both invaded Poland lol.

  • @tonyromano6220
    @tonyromano6220 2 роки тому +25

    Good stuff!
    I always have admired how the Soviets stopped the NAZIs just short of Moscow.

    • @lxathu
      @lxathu 2 роки тому

      In 1941, Hitler was sober and took the winter and the long, unstable supply chain into consideration, made the Axis armies fell back and fortify instead of push forward.
      A year later, as if he had been a totally different leader: he complete lost it in frustration caused by his own impatience.

    • @internetperson8638
      @internetperson8638 2 роки тому +5

      @@lxathu No, don't act like he made wise decisions in 1941. They greatly miscalculated the winter, supply, Soviet resistance, etc.

    • @lxathu
      @lxathu 2 роки тому

      @@internetperson8638 Of course, Barbarossa was built on rubbish reconnaissance and ignored the widening feature of the SU.
      But at least, he could adopt to the current situation in 41. But lost it later.

    • @internetperson8638
      @internetperson8638 2 роки тому +3

      @@lxathu He could because of the momentum and the fact that it took the soviets a bit to reorganize.

    • @paulsnell534
      @paulsnell534 2 роки тому

      Just like the Ukrainians have stopped the Russians short of Kyiv a month ago

  • @kaletovhangar
    @kaletovhangar 2 роки тому +29

    Probably the only movie that depicted the massive tank battle of Dubno-Brody,at least briefly.In number of tanks on the rather narrow front,it was even bigger than individual engagements at Kursk.

  • @Mysterious_Person.87
    @Mysterious_Person.87 Рік тому +12

    Damn, what a great heroes of soviet Union

  • @TheRedzipper
    @TheRedzipper Рік тому +16

    Świetny film! dziękuję!

    • @user-ph3up3yj4g
      @user-ph3up3yj4g 5 місяців тому +2

      Да, мой польский брат. Именно так! ✊

  • @knightnight1894
    @knightnight1894 Рік тому +5

    BT, T-34/76, KV-1(turret), wow, they got lots of those real stuff. Bravo.

  • @nizam8674
    @nizam8674 2 роки тому +6

    Thanks for your English subtitled

  • @nishitakulkarni9703
    @nishitakulkarni9703 Рік тому +10

    43:32 I've rarely seen such effects of bombing! Must be devastating!! 🙁😟🥺

  • @alexstrazhnikov5365
    @alexstrazhnikov5365 Рік тому +8

    Many thanks to Karen Georgievich Shakhnazarov for the development of this youtube channel. Now there is thing to watch!!!

  • @Sangwan421
    @Sangwan421 2 роки тому +22

    Russian people are honest, truthful and practical and their films reflects this
    ❤️ from India

    • @robashton8606
      @robashton8606 2 роки тому +2

      Not honest enough to mention the non aggression pact that the Nazis and Soviets signed though. You know, the one where they carved Poland up?

    • @alansewell7810
      @alansewell7810 2 роки тому +4

      @@robashton8606 In the 1930s, France proposed a mutual assistance pact of France, Britain, and the Soviet Union against an attack by Germany. Britain declined, and the idea was not fulfilled. The Soviets then watched the French and British make an alliance to defend Czechoslovakia, then void it when Hitler wanted Sudetenland. The Soviets felt that Hitler was a monster, but since they could not obtain allies among the Western powers, the least worst alternative was a non-aggression pact with Hitler. Stalin felt that would buy at least two years to upgrade the Soviet armies, while the Germans wore themselves down fighting the British. Cynical and selfish, yes, and the Soviets paid a terrible price for trusting Hitler and stabbing Poland in the back. But it was presumed to be the least worst option, given that the Soviets could obtain no allies in the nations west of Germany.

    • @robashton8606
      @robashton8606 2 роки тому +1

      @@alansewell7810 Not disputing any of that, merely pointing out that the film completely glossed over it. It also tried to show Stalin ordering Red Army units on to high alert after received intelligence when, in fact, the opposite wax true; Stalin ordered all border units to stand down on the eve of the attack so as not to "provoke" the Nazis. They paid dearly for that as well. I haven't reached far enough yet, but I'm willing to bet the film won't show Stalin going into a catatonic funk for a week as the enormity of his balls up becomes clear.

    • @alansewell7810
      @alansewell7810 2 роки тому +2

      @@robashton8606 I didn't see the date the movie was made. I wonder if it is recent, or from the Cold War era when the Communist Party was more protective of Stalin's wartime legacy. One thing I've noticed in watching Russian movies is that they have very good actors playing the critical roles of Stalin, Zhukov, Rokkosovski, Molotov; and also good acting on the part of Hitler and the German generals. The scripts and the actors are well done and generally true to life, even if important parts of the story are omitted because they are detrimental to Russian / Soviet honor.

    • @robashton8606
      @robashton8606 2 роки тому +1

      @@alansewell7810 I'd say that this series of films, like the Liberation sequence also to be found on this channel, most definitely dates from the height of the cold war. The Party line is followed very closely, and only Nazi troops are showed misbehaving.
      I agree that many of the actors are remarkable lookalikes (although Rokossovsky and Zhukov look nothing like the actual men) and the set piece battles are impressive in scope and scale. They are enjoyable and, for people who aren't as familiar with the course if events on the Eastern front, informative to watch, provided the viewer is cognisant of the level of pro Soviet bias being employed.

  • @Theearthtraveler
    @Theearthtraveler 2 роки тому +9

    Great movie!

  • @steveiliev8912
    @steveiliev8912 2 роки тому +23

    It is not the greatest Russian war movie, but it was still good!
    ….I loved the Moravia planes , and the helicopter at 19:18 in the second episode too!
    👍🏻
    🍻

    • @lxathu
      @lxathu 2 роки тому

      Wow, I guess you are not one whose focus is easily distracted by magicians.
      I didn't notice it watching at the collapsing buildings and the folks around.
      Nice catch.

    • @remy12
      @remy12 2 роки тому

      What's the best Russian War movie? I enjoy them is why I'm asking, would like some recommendations.

    • @steveiliev8912
      @steveiliev8912 2 роки тому +2

      @@remy12 hi!
      There are a lot of Russian war movies!
      I would call Russia world champion of war movies!
      I do not like Russian “Hollywood” stile moves! I like the Russian Russian war movies!
      Start with Liberation sequel ! It is epic super production of 5 movies made fro late 60’s till mid 70’s! It still look good! There are many American, British, German and Italian actors in it , because it shows different angles of the war! Music is insane!

    • @steveiliev8912
      @steveiliev8912 2 роки тому +1

      @@remy12
      Some more:
      “The Brest fortress” and “Panfilov’s 28”!
      “Battle of Sevastopol” and “Stalingrad”!

    • @remy12
      @remy12 2 роки тому

      @@steveiliev8912 Thanks! I will check those out for sure!

  • @SJSnc69
    @SJSnc69 2 роки тому +25

    Thank you for posting these films.

  • @user-so2ly3ug8d
    @user-so2ly3ug8d 7 місяців тому +5

    Remember: Yuri Ozerov was ahead of George Lucas, Peter Jackson, and David Yates. And he was ahead of them in that he was the first to film a prequel franchise to his original franchise. And yes, if, that his "Battle of Moscow" is the first prequel to "Liberation". The second was "Stalingrad" (1989). And yes, he also had a spin-off to "Liberation" called "Soldiers of Freedom", which predates the prequels. And I don't know if that spin-off will be translated or not. But you should know about it.

  • @walterscott2501
    @walterscott2501 2 роки тому +11

    Very intresting and inspiring courageous movie

  • @davidmccann9811
    @davidmccann9811 Рік тому +4

    Love seeing all the T 34s and the KV1 made from a 1950s Stalin tank. Great stuff. 👍

  • @F__A
    @F__A Рік тому +7

    Request, ... Please upload the film:
    *Soldiers of Freedom (1977), with ENGLISH subtitle
    4 parts (~ 600 minutes)
    Directed by Yuri Ozerov
    Thanks for your good quality videos.

  • @zabdas83
    @zabdas83 Рік тому +2

    Spasibo...

  • @quantumdog_enlisted
    @quantumdog_enlisted 2 роки тому +5

    That actor really, but really looks like Voroshilov. Spitting image.

  • @clarkewi
    @clarkewi 2 роки тому +118

    The world owes a great deal to Russia.

    • @pawelsawicki1750
      @pawelsawicki1750 2 роки тому +7

      ...and what exactly would that be...?

    • @clarkewi
      @clarkewi 2 роки тому +2

      @@pawelsawicki1750 The end of Hitlerism.

    • @robashton8606
      @robashton8606 2 роки тому +27

      Yes. It does. The fighting on the Eastern front made the war in the West look like a mere sideshow, and the sacrifice and horror the Soviet people endured should never be forgotten.

    • @NarcissismSurvivor
      @NarcissismSurvivor 2 роки тому +7

      Considering what happened in 2016 I’m gonna say Nah

    • @silvercollector434
      @silvercollector434 2 роки тому

      For WHAT?? Spreading communism worldwide? We defeated the wrong enemy

  • @andrejmucic5003
    @andrejmucic5003 6 місяців тому +1

    Awesome!

  • @triplemango101
    @triplemango101 2 роки тому +5

    Good movie 😍

  • @OverMankind
    @OverMankind 15 днів тому +1

    The opening conveniently left out the part where the USSR invaded the eastern half of Poland.

  • @markcana2917
    @markcana2917 2 роки тому +3

    You should watch brest fortress
    Beautiful movie🥺

  • @user-cg3em8qv8x
    @user-cg3em8qv8x 4 місяці тому

    Делайте субтитры на других языках,люди должны знать правду!Это тоже борьба за МИР!

  • @rhoff523
    @rhoff523 2 роки тому +3

    thank you for making material such as this available. I would like to watch it as it is well made, however due the large number of commercials and time to rebuffer after each I won't. I watched 13 minutes of this, jumping to a second video while my satellite connection catches up. I finished the other which was 33 m long with 48000 views. People gotta make money and I refuse to fund UA-cam for more money than a Netflix subscription. Thanks again.

  • @OsvaldoDuartejuramento
    @OsvaldoDuartejuramento 2 роки тому +6

    Por favor legenda português ou espanhol 👍

  • @TheThridwolf
    @TheThridwolf 11 місяців тому

    I remember watching this movie in 80s as kid and fell in sleep

  • @user-vg2mv2yu3u
    @user-vg2mv2yu3u 2 роки тому +5

    🇷🇺露西亜軍、素晴らしい✨

  • @OsvaldoDuartejuramento
    @OsvaldoDuartejuramento Рік тому +3

    Por favor legenda português ou espanhol

  • @salvadorhurtado9988
    @salvadorhurtado9988 4 місяці тому

    It is a very accurate portrayal of the openeng of the Eastern Front, exept for one colossal mistake. Otto Skorzeny is portrayed here as the leader of the Brandenburger battalion and planner of the commando actions to start the attack on june 1941. On that date, Scorzeny was just a simple infantry lieutenant with the Wienner troops and had no part on planning or any commando action.
    Otto Skorzeny's first appointment came on 1943, and his first action was the liberation of the Duce, Mussolini, from his prison on the Gran Sasso mountain in Italy. Then he went on to form and lead the commando battalion on Friedenthal, formed mainly by fallschimjëger troops.
    Second lieutenant Skorzeny started the war against the USSR as a lowly platoon commander in the year 1941. Soon he distinguished himself, and climbed up the ladder. He became capitain in 1943, major in 1944 and was promoted to Colonel when he was assigned to defend the Oder at the end of the war.
    You can check that on multiple sources.
    Putting that aside, the film is absolutely amazing! Great film making of the old Soviet Union. I enjoyed it enormously. Thank you!

  • @mxx6044
    @mxx6044 2 роки тому +3

    The greatest counry ever

  • @TheDoctor1225
    @TheDoctor1225 2 роки тому +5

    A lot of people are commenting on the fact that the movie doesn't mention the pact made between Hitler and Stalin (well not by name - Pavlov mentioned it at about 26 minutes into the movie - "They signed a non-agression pact with us"). Well, given the fact that it's a Russian movie and was made in 1985, that's not really all that surprising, when you think about it. I mean, when you look at classics like "The Great Escape" and "Objective: Burma!" which were both made by the USA (of which I am a proud citizen, so spare me any BS about hating the country) and both of which GREATLY inflated the role of US soldiers in the respective stories, it really shouldn't be a surprise that the USSR at the time wasn't going to make a movie that started by saying "Oh yeah, those bastards betrayed the Czech people but you know, we were cool for signing a non-aggression pact with Hitler becuase we didn't plan on him stabbing us in the back." Look how long the myth of the widespread French "resistance" has persisted, even to the banning of "The Sorrow and the PIty" for many years because it 'destroyed myths the French people still need." It's very probably part and parcel of movies made in every country to gloss over unpleasant things and make your people look like stalwart heroes - and probably always has been, when you think about it.

    • @astrolillo
      @astrolillo 2 роки тому +4

      LOL I didnt know that if you are American you cannot be told any criticism of the US, weird, because Americans love love love to shit all the time on Russia, China, Iran, France, etc, etc, you only like Anglos and Scandinavians (HItler would have liked that). For all its limitations this movie portrays a lot of Soviet mistakes, when you watch an American movie about Pearl Harbor, there is 0 self-criticism, they paint themselves as chilling on the beach and those bad bad Japanese came over with a total surprise but 20 min later the Americans started to beat them, because America fuck yeah

    • @Lassisvulgaris
      @Lassisvulgaris 2 роки тому +4

      Actually, Germany was, de facto, beaten by the Battle of Moscow 1942, in the sence that losses were higher than could be deplenished. Germany did advance as far as Stalingrad that year, but was given a bloody nose. Final nail in the coffin was the Battle of Kursk summer 1943. This was just before the British and US forces set foot on European soil. Germany was never able to launch any greater offensive on the Eastern Front after that.....
      The most important US contribution, was "Lend and Lease". D-Day was helpful, but the Soviets would most probably have liberated Europe by itself, though it would have taken longer.....

    • @internetperson8638
      @internetperson8638 2 роки тому +4

      It was not a pact. It was a non-aggression pact. Stalin wanted to buy time because he knew the Red Army was not prepared in terms of materiel, organization, etc. He knew the war was coming, so he wanted to push the war to ATLEAST 1942, but according to him, the ideal time would be 1943, and that is when they would achieve equilibrium with the German Army and be able to smash them. He was proven correct, because by 1943, the Red Army was extremely powerful and launched successful operations, and the military industrial base was strong.

    • @internetperson8638
      @internetperson8638 2 роки тому +4

      @@Lassisvulgaris Very true, Stalin said in retrospect they would have won without Lend Lease, it would have just taken longer. A German general (I forget who) was asked in the Nuremburg trials "At what point did you know the war was lost?" He replied with one word. "Moscow".
      The German army was already defeated in 1941-1942.

    • @Lassisvulgaris
      @Lassisvulgaris 2 роки тому

      @@internetperson8638 Hindsight is always 20/20. There are too many "what ifs" to know what could have happened....

  • @Mike-jw4xh
    @Mike-jw4xh 2 роки тому +6

    Outstanding! Could you also do a film on the nazi war crimes in ukraine and poland??

    • @Pucaramodels
      @Pucaramodels 2 роки тому +2

      He doesnt make this films, he publishes russian films with english subtitles

    • @900108Chale
      @900108Chale Рік тому

      @@pegarange if you read the description this was made in the 1980s Mosfilms was a great movie producer of the SOVIET ERA!
      ask dead Gorbachov if he can commission some more movies to pleasure you…

    • @user-dq9wm4dd8t
      @user-dq9wm4dd8t 5 місяців тому

      Посмотри кино помни имя свое

  • @elizabethcanavan3755
    @elizabethcanavan3755 5 місяців тому +1

    In the introduction they skip the bit about the Nazi -Soviet pact to jointly invade Poland,thus giving the Nazis the freedom to invade Wesstern Europe.

  • @pz3j
    @pz3j 6 місяців тому

    Wow! I'm surprised by the good quality of the action sequences.

  • @user-tz1yp3to4b
    @user-tz1yp3to4b 4 місяці тому

    Я русский мне 33 и я думаю очень большая заслуга победы это Сталин и его режим люди были закаленые как сталь но и конечно потриатизм людей и сила духа все или нечего

  • @rgyalrongw940
    @rgyalrongw940 Рік тому

    What is the (Germany) music played at the beginning between 2:00 and 2:40?

  • @britishpatriot7386
    @britishpatriot7386 6 місяців тому +1

    Germany lost against Britain though when they tried to invade, the battle of Britain gave Russia time to prepare for Germany and we supplied them. Just thought I'd correct that reading at the start of the movie. Operation sealion would of been the end for us had they succeeded and Russia would fall because of it. Russia though were the main reason for Germany's defeat by far imo so we owe much to Russia 🙏

  • @user-ck2hc9nx7d
    @user-ck2hc9nx7d 4 місяці тому

    Забыли добавить Пакт Молотова -- Риббентропа и сообщить о вторжении СССР в Польшу 17 сентября .

  • @user-jn8gk3bq5n
    @user-jn8gk3bq5n Рік тому +3

    Генерал капец настоящий мужчина и офицер!!!

  • @SaySthAsItIs
    @SaySthAsItIs Рік тому +1

    USSR was a slow warm-up country in WWII, it's autocratic and bureaucratic made its operations less efficient than it's supposed to be, let alone the Great Purge before WWII that killed thousands of capable officers in Red Army and made its military force ruled by political commissar rather than experienced officers. Fortunately, Starlin found Zhukov, the "Firemaster" of High Command who leveraged his command ability that won a landslide victory over Japanese aggression in Mongolia, which deterred Japanese army from massive aggression to USSR badly needed by Nazi Germany. It's hard to say Zhukov saved USSR, it's fair to say this man contributed significantly to the victory of WWII.

  • @carlstanwick7287
    @carlstanwick7287 2 роки тому +2

    DOSE IT MATTER WHERE IT WAS MADE 🙌

  • @peterszigeti7476
    @peterszigeti7476 2 роки тому +5

    1.st part, 1'30... And the Soviet Union invaded the other part of Poland. Somehow the commentator doesn't mention this fact. As in the old long times. See Patjomkin: History of Diplomacy... and so on.

    • @buxtehude123
      @buxtehude123 2 роки тому +3

      As a Hungarian you should be deeply ashamed about the roles fascist Hungary, dictatorship Poland and Germany played in shameful destruction of Czechoslovakia.

    • @astrolillo
      @astrolillo 2 роки тому

      @@buxtehude123 LOL, that part he will be silent on.

  • @jasonignacio8484
    @jasonignacio8484 2 роки тому +5

    I want russian movie 🎥

  • @elisekehle8520
    @elisekehle8520 2 роки тому

    are the planes at 44:33 supposed to be Hs 129s?

  • @aztro4010
    @aztro4010 Рік тому +1

    Why 2 parts? It's not really that long in total. 2h 46m in total.

  • @davidhunt1947
    @davidhunt1947 2 роки тому +2

    Too bad they did not mention that Pavlov went to get executed along with about eight other high-ranking officers. Still, an entertaining film which gives one an idea of what it was like. Yes, a bit of propaganda, but it is worth watching.

    • @kaletovhangar
      @kaletovhangar 2 роки тому +1

      Well,they did reintroduce Pavlov's case in later "War on the western direction" from 1990,with quite a gruesome details concerning his torture by Beria.

    • @seanohare5488
      @seanohare5488 Рік тому

      Agree

  • @susisorglos6125
    @susisorglos6125 Рік тому +1

    A good movie, with a lot of historical fails and omissions.

    • @ascott6328
      @ascott6328 Рік тому +1

      they make comrade stalin look such a kindly old fellow

    • @PitcockFTW
      @PitcockFTW Рік тому +1

      @@ascott6328 well better Than Hitler who always had bipolar attack,also Stalin were close to Gen Zhukov, not like Hitler who has nobody except maybe Eva'

  • @printdaniel
    @printdaniel 2 роки тому

    That CGI is perfect.

    • @user-dq9wm4dd8t
      @user-dq9wm4dd8t 5 місяців тому

      😢😢 когда снимался этот фильм ещё не было ни какой компьютерной графики

  • @rowancoggins9638
    @rowancoggins9638 Місяць тому

    I dont wish to be rude, but where is the admission that the Russians attacked Poland from the other side with an agreement with Germany. This seems to be missing from the introduction. interesting.

  • @eldritchwulfe
    @eldritchwulfe Рік тому +1

    Interesting note, this was the only time in \WW2 the germans used underwater tanks

  • @galinakarneckaja4564
    @galinakarneckaja4564 4 місяці тому

    Знали что воина будет но никто не предприняли ни каких правил.

  • @jurygalati5732
    @jurygalati5732 7 місяців тому

    14:15 is it really Chuikov, or the translation is wrong and he said Zhukov?

  • @elenacontreras8698
    @elenacontreras8698 9 місяців тому +4

    ES UNA LÁSTIMA QUE ESTE DOCUMENTAL TAN INTERESANTE NO ESTE SUBTITULADO EN ESPAÑOL

  • @yayocowboy
    @yayocowboy 3 місяці тому

    von rundstedt was old, and it lookes like he was also short, in real life

  • @sitting_nut
    @sitting_nut 2 роки тому +8

    lots of usa regime tools here mentioning molotov ribbentrop agreement in 1939 . they fail to mention that land ussr got under than agreement was and isn't polish land, but was occupied by poland after ww1. almost all of it is now in belorus and ukraine. current poland is not making any claim on them.
    in contrast under munich agreement uk and france in effect handed over land in czechoslovakia to germany. poland and hungry also occupied lands from czechoslovakia at the same time.

    • @pawelpap9
      @pawelpap9 2 роки тому

      Don’t know much about history but still will make a fool of myself on the internet. Keep bringing pearls of your wisdom!

    • @sitting_nut
      @sitting_nut 2 роки тому +1

      @@pawelpap9 if there is any thing that is not factual in what i said, why don't you specify that..cravenly hiding behind vague words, like you did , is resort of those who know they have no valid case .

    • @robashton8606
      @robashton8606 2 роки тому

      People are only pointing out the way this film made a point of the Western treaty with the Germans, whilst completely glossing over the Soviet attempts to appease the Fascists.
      Wind your neck in. You're making a bit of a tit of yourself.
      Again.

    • @sitting_nut
      @sitting_nut 2 роки тому +1

      ​@@robashton8606 you know you have no case hence your name calling and insults.
      what "soviet attempts to appease the fascists" are you talking about? be specific .
      here are the facts -
      in 1939 ussr reclaimed lands illegally occupied by poland after ww1 (which remain outside poland in belorus and ukraine, and are not claimed by current poland), after poland in 1938 joined other fascists in germany and hungry to invade and occupy lands in czechoslovakia, with blessing of uk and france, who were seeking to spark a war between ussr and germany. why should they "gloss over" that fact?
      in movie both german dictator and others mention the relationship that exist between ussr and germany before the invasion of ussr.
      face facts, instead of trying to mindlessly parrot the western propaganda. learn to think critically.

    • @robashton8606
      @robashton8606 2 роки тому

      @@sitting_nut Signing a non aggression pact is, by definition, appeasement.
      You really _aren't_ very bright, are you?

  • @bitsnpieces11
    @bitsnpieces11 2 роки тому +1

    Maybe it was a hot style of the time, but, I would NOT have had a mustache of that style even as an actor.

  • @viorelpiscanu9425
    @viorelpiscanu9425 6 місяців тому

    Today it is a complet different narrative about WW2... East & West... Two opposite sides two different stories... Lessons to be learned... Human memory is short... Unfortunatelly...

  • @TrustMeiamaD.R.
    @TrustMeiamaD.R. Рік тому

    Chamberlain bought us time to build enough Spitfires to destroy one third of the Luftwaffe in the battle of Britain. He took it on the chest, history has much maligned him subsequently.

  • @bapaiahkothuri2719
    @bapaiahkothuri2719 2 роки тому +1

    Честно говоря, Россия очень хороша, даже если Германию разрушить, она восстановится

  • @rickd650
    @rickd650 2 роки тому +1

    At 54:28 i half expected the man to tell the commanding officer that he'd have to answer to the Coca-Cola company.....

  • @alexdelarge209
    @alexdelarge209 Рік тому

    Uh, Poland? Good movie though; & a fair portion of the world's perspective.

  • @k.i.a7240
    @k.i.a7240 Рік тому

    Interesting moive however, overwhelming amount of inaccuracies.

  • @user-jy5kn1mu7i
    @user-jy5kn1mu7i Рік тому +1

    Западным комментаторам которые вспоминают пакт Молотова Риббентропа хочу напомнить что та территория на которую вступила красная армия никогда не была Польшей. На этой территории всегда жили православные белорусы и украинцы . В средние века страна называлась великое княжество литовское. Католическая Польша находится западнее

    • @user-fq6rd4gz9h
      @user-fq6rd4gz9h Рік тому

      причем тут совок и княжество литовское? это просто агрессия по отношению к польше в союзе с гитлером

  • @user-wr6nr5he8m
    @user-wr6nr5he8m 6 місяців тому +1

    Long life to Mother Russia CCCP URSS...❤❤❤❤

    • @SanovichSit
      @SanovichSit 5 місяців тому

      Russia is not the USSR unfortunately((

  • @faraday_official
    @faraday_official Місяць тому

    No subtitle to Indonesia 🤔🤔

  • @dirtyharrydefeatsislamblmt6900
    @dirtyharrydefeatsislamblmt6900 8 місяців тому

    & all the discs again too ,

  • @thumtlnguyen3626
    @thumtlnguyen3626 7 місяців тому

    23:09 How did the film director make a basic mistake driving on the right in Japan?

    • @user-so2ly3ug8d
      @user-so2ly3ug8d 7 місяців тому

      Because there were no right-hand drive cars in Vietnam. Yes, Japan was filmed in Vietnam. And yes, it's strange you ask a question about this, considering that in this movie Tigers in 1941.

  • @lanalo8675
    @lanalo8675 2 роки тому

    Мосфильм! Показывайте только комедии! Плиииз!

  • @user-gc3xf9zt5y
    @user-gc3xf9zt5y 10 місяців тому

    Агрессия и войны всегда шли с Запада 1000 лет! Когда вы поумнеете? Надоели со своими угрозами, пусть ваше зло вам и возвращается!

  • @vladimirkanzyani4314
    @vladimirkanzyani4314 Рік тому +4

    The greatest war movie of all time 🫶🏽

  • @Lotta207
    @Lotta207 9 місяців тому

    01:11:10 досадная ошибка вместо 23 июня ...(((23 июля...🧐

  • @jovohodzic508
    @jovohodzic508 6 місяців тому

    Can someone please explain to me why do Russiana pronounce letter H in foreign names as G, for example Hitler, Halder, Holland, Herzegovina etc. as Gitler, Galder, Gerzegovina, Golandiya etc? It's not like the letter H and sound H in particular is not present in the Russian language.

    • @SanovichSit
      @SanovichSit 5 місяців тому

      Так нам удобнее.

  • @michaelwackers6475
    @michaelwackers6475 Рік тому

    The massive German tanks (Tigers) featured in this dramatization did not see service before August 1942!

    • @nomad7966
      @nomad7966 Рік тому +1

      Да, так же как и т34-85, ис, ис-2 и т.д. Если быть чересчур беспристрастным к подобным эпизодам этого фильма, то тут так же не показано как Гитлер спит, просыпается, ходит в туалет, умываться...

  • @user-xg5ri8ml5v
    @user-xg5ri8ml5v Рік тому

    Now I am waiting film ,,2022 Kyiev three days "

  • @gregk.6723
    @gregk.6723 5 місяців тому

    44:23 Planes, WTF ?

  • @secretagent86
    @secretagent86 2 роки тому

    in general terms i like this sort of film (and i will watch part 2). the twin engine aircraft with double tailfin? never seen one. anyone know what it was supposed to be? looked more like a beechcraft lol. and all the tanks passing each other... sheesh. perfect opportunity to shoot from the sides. etc. etc. etc. Star Media Russian war moves are far better

    • @Lassisvulgaris
      @Lassisvulgaris 2 роки тому

      Petlyakov Pe-2...?

    • @kaletovhangar
      @kaletovhangar 2 роки тому

      @@Lassisvulgaris Naah,it's some Czech trainer aircraft. Still at least it somewhat resembles BF-110.

    • @Lassisvulgaris
      @Lassisvulgaris 2 роки тому

      @@kaletovhangar Thanks. I stand corrected.....

    • @myguitarjoe
      @myguitarjoe 2 роки тому

      @@Lassisvulgaris It´s czech aerotaxi L-200 Morava.

    • @Lassisvulgaris
      @Lassisvulgaris 2 роки тому

      @@myguitarjoe Thanks.....

  • @davidneale6950
    @davidneale6950 Рік тому +1

    What they've forgotten to mention in the open sequence is, russia Also invaded poland.
    16 days after the germans attacked, they (russia) without a declaration of war Stabbed poland in the back, while they (the poles) were fighting for their very existence 😡

    • @warsawpact1548
      @warsawpact1548 Рік тому +2

      At the time, the government of Poland could bot be located. Through no channels could anyone speak to Polish leadership. It was later found out that much of the government along with the president of Poland, had fled to Romania. President Moscicki, being the only president of Poland, and also interned in Romania, left Poland without leadership. He could not hand down any orders, any political action while in Romania. In effect - Both legally by international law, and literally, by the conditions existing in Poland, Poland was no longer a state. It had no government.
      President and his government had made their way into Romania as early as September 15th, where they were interned. In International law, if a government is interned in another country, it can take no political action. It can not function as a government. (Romania was neutral in the war, so to have the Polish government in their borders handing down orders to the Polish army fighting the Germans would have made them no longer neutral.)
      On September 17th, the Red Army entered Poland. That day Supreme Commander of the Polish military Smigly gave an order to all Polish troops. "The Soviets have invaded. My orders are to carry out the retirement into Romania and Hungary by the shortest roots. Do not engage the Soviets in military actions, only in the event of disarming our units by them. ... Units whose position the soviets have approached should negotiate with them with the aim of the exit of the garrison into Romania or Hungary."
      A state of war did not exist between the Poland and the USSR in 1939. To fire on the Soviets was illegal, and insubordination.
      On September 18th the soviets told the united states that the intention of their military action was to "protect minorities in the areas of Poland where there is no government." By September 24th, no action had been taken by any Polish-allied state to declare the USSR hostile to Poland, and their neutrality in the conflict was at that time recognized universally.
      Only by September 30th had the first stirrings of a Polish government in exile under General Sikorski begun in France. Poland was without a government for atleast 15 days, and had the soviets not secured the area, the Germans surely would have.

    • @davidneale6950
      @davidneale6950 Рік тому +1

      @@warsawpact1548
      Male Bovine Excrement 🐃💩
      The ussr and germany had in august, with the ribbentrop/molotov pact, agreed to invade and divide Poland.

  • @iliapopovich
    @iliapopovich 6 місяців тому

    The war movies of the Soviets were way better than the Americans especially "Come and See", but I have to agree that "Saving Private Ryan" was great.

  • @user-tz1yp3to4b
    @user-tz1yp3to4b 4 місяці тому

    А как после Берлина разгромили японцев эшелон ы шли сразу на Японию на опыте разбили японцев я был в шеке посмотрев док фильм

  • @wiesiarybicka5891
    @wiesiarybicka5891 Рік тому

    85mm T34 tanks were not available until 1943/44.

    • @clastos
      @clastos Рік тому

      Neither there were german tanks with russian caterpillars Christie-type as it appears on the movie.

  • @user-ck2hc9nx7d
    @user-ck2hc9nx7d 4 місяці тому

    А где война с Финляндией и оккупация Прибалтики , захват румынской Молдовы ..

  • @GardenerEarthGuy
    @GardenerEarthGuy Рік тому

    They actually used live ammunition to avoid paying actors?

  • @robbesymons1866
    @robbesymons1866 2 роки тому

    Awesome movie if only they haven’t dubbed the German than I would rate it 10/10

    • @pawelpap9
      @pawelpap9 2 роки тому

      They haven’t dubbed the German. There is just the voice over, you can hear the original German underneath.

  • @matthewmoreland8119
    @matthewmoreland8119 2 роки тому

    Is there an original version without the Russian dubs over the German?

    • @Lassisvulgaris
      @Lassisvulgaris 2 роки тому

      This IS the original version, Soviet way.....

  • @lxathu
    @lxathu 2 роки тому +8

    Interesting to see that even in 1985, while Gorbachev was already opening the door, the official Soviet history telling was still so that Poland was attacked by Germany alone in 1939.

    • @robashton8606
      @robashton8606 2 роки тому +4

      Gosh! Be careful! I posted something similar about a week ago and I've been constantly bombarded with indignant (not to mention peculiarly divorced from reality) missives from some weird Stalin fanboy.
      Anything that disparages Stalin or the Soviet Union is "fascist lies", or "Western propaganda".
      The kid's a real fruit loop.
      Pray he doesn't see your comment!😂😂😂

    • @lxathu
      @lxathu 2 роки тому +1

      @@robashton8606 I'm not surprised.
      He may have been a flippant kid but a serious agent as well.
      What Putin is doing now is a direct continuation of the pre-Khrushchev propaganda in which everything that the Soviet Motherland did was clean, peaceful, humane and perfect in all point of views.
      He invests a lot in this propaganda -- basically that's around all what he can and want to offer to Russia and to the still gravitating ones of the ex-Soviet countries: a triumphant past. And he wants to polish it from all bloody stains just like his predecessors did.
      He learned a lot as a member of the department of active measures within KGB and he's using all professionally.

    • @saulomagalhaes7431
      @saulomagalhaes7431 2 роки тому +1

      Also so that they have "liberated" Poland... not invaded

    • @lxathu
      @lxathu 2 роки тому +1

      @@saulomagalhaes7431 The killer half-truth that all dirty regimes use.
      They really liberated Poland from the Germans... after invading it together with them, after liquidating the officers and upper middle class in the area they occupied and after intentionally waiting for the uprising to be choked in blood without outer help or supply - in order to have even more of the ones ready to act eliminated.

    • @saulomagalhaes7431
      @saulomagalhaes7431 2 роки тому

      @@lxathu yes that's true... I was also referring more to the earlier invasion when there was still a non-aggression pact with Germany (when btw Britain didn't do anything about it)

  • @childhood8054
    @childhood8054 2 роки тому +1

    56:50

  • @zogzog1063
    @zogzog1063 2 роки тому +1

    The incompetent vs the incompetent. The politicians fail as they always have and always will.

    • @toytoy1091
      @toytoy1091 2 роки тому

      Mmmm. Politicians. Well - I have some shocking news for u Mr Zig Zog. Politicians are people - just exactly like u and me. Sometimes they lie. Sometimes they drink and drive. Sometimes they have sex with someone they shouldn't. Sometimes they fiddle their taxes. Yep - they are just like you and me. It's gross hypocracy to demand that politicians must, once elected, somehow become better than the rest of us.
      Mr ZigZog ... if u can do a better job than politicians, all u have to do is get yourself elected, and we can all stand back and watch you transform the world.
      Or maybe not ...

    • @zogzog1063
      @zogzog1063 2 роки тому

      @@toytoy1091 What an interesting specimen! Let us have a dissection. First up, and a red flag, is your attempt to ascribe values to someone else that you do not know. We could leave it here because of the logic that you do no know me and cannot say (you can think it as every Untermensch has the right) what someone else's values are. Not a good start.
      Second, the deliberate misspelling of my name is infantile. Really, is that your best shot? I acknowledge if there is a wit in it then maybe you can let it go - for example referring to Donald Trump as Rump because of his unfortunate physical characteristic. But here??
      Third, this concept of becoming a politician is a non-sequitur. To explain it terms that you might grasp: Imagine I (or you, or anyone for that matter) do not like cornflakes. We have our reasons (carbs, processing, seed oils). So we express our doubts. It is not coherent to expect a critic to change professions to 'solve the world' from cornflakes. I suspect you will be a little slow (or unwilling) to grasp the inanity of this idea. Let us have another example: You do not like the play of a footballer - it is plain daft to expect the critic to replace that footballer.
      Flies do need to be swatted.

    • @toytoy1091
      @toytoy1091 2 роки тому +1

      @@zogzog1063 Mr Zig Zog, I understand your concerns. But what if you're a famous footballer, and flies land on your cornflakes?
      Should you expect politicans to remove the flies, or ban footballers from eating cornflakes ?

  • @wetselsvinopas538
    @wetselsvinopas538 Рік тому

    Pavlos is so funny

  • @geraldmiller5260
    @geraldmiller5260 2 роки тому +11

    Narrator forgot how Russia invaded Poland from the east, with their best buddy from Berlin.

    • @sitting_nut
      @sitting_nut 2 роки тому +5

      then how about uk and france which signed treaty in 1938 handing over land in czechoslovakia to germany? not to mention poland and hungry also getting land from czechoslovakia at the same time.
      also land poland lost 1939 to ussr was and isn't polish land, but poland occupied it after ww1. almost all of it is now in belorus and ukraine.

    • @warsawpact1548
      @warsawpact1548 Рік тому

      At the time, the government of Poland could bot be located. Through no channels could anyone speak to Polish leadership. It was later found out that much of the government along with the president of Poland, had fled to Romania. President Moscicki, being the only president of Poland, and also interned in Romania, left Poland without leadership. He could not hand down any orders, any political action while in Romania. In effect - Both legally by international law, and literally, by the conditions existing in Poland, Poland was no longer a state. It had no government.
      President and his government had made their way into Romania as early as September 15th, where they were interned. In International law, if a government is interned in another country, it can take no political action. It can not function as a government. (Romania was neutral in the war, so to have the Polish government in their borders handing down orders to the Polish army fighting the Germans would have made them no longer neutral.)
      On September 17th, the Red Army entered Poland. That day Supreme Commander of the Polish military Smigly gave an order to all Polish troops. "The Soviets have invaded. My orders are to carry out the retirement into Romania and Hungary by the shortest roots. Do not engage the Soviets in military actions, only in the event of disarming our units by them. ... Units whose position the soviets have approached should negotiate with them with the aim of the exit of the garrison into Romania or Hungary."
      A state of war did not exist between the Poland and the USSR in 1939. To fire on the Soviets was illegal, and insubordination.
      On September 18th the soviets told the united states that the intention of their military action was to "protect minorities in the areas of Poland where there is no government." By September 24th, no action had been taken by any Polish-allied state to declare the USSR hostile to Poland, and their neutrality in the conflict was at that time recognized universally.
      Only by September 30th had the first stirrings of a Polish government in exile under General Sikorski begun in France. Poland was without a government for atleast 15 days, and had the soviets not secured the area, the Germans surely would have.

    • @user-jy5kn1mu7i
      @user-jy5kn1mu7i Рік тому +1

      Территория на которую вступило СССР никогда не было Польшей это територии западной Украины и белоруси захваченные Польшей в результате советско польской войны 1920 года . На этих территориях всегда проживали белорусы и украинцы . В средние века эта территория называлось великое княжество литовское. Польша находится западнее

    • @user-vn5rt5qp8s
      @user-vn5rt5qp8s Рік тому

      И как американец Генри Форд строил в германии заводы.

  • @HansJuergBangerter
    @HansJuergBangerter 8 місяців тому

    What this movie forgets is the ATTACK OF SOVIET UNION TWICE ON POLAND AND THEN ON FINLAND, also that Stalin massacred 5 Million Kulaks the most productive Ukrainian and Russian Farmers...so Hitler compared to Stalin was like a boy scout.