The Russia We LostThe Russia We Lost (Russian: Россия, которую мы потеряли, romanized: Rossiya, kotoruyu my poteryali, lit. 'Russia, which we lost') is a 1992 Russian documentary film directed and narrated by Stanislav Govorukhin, dedicated to pre-revolutionary Russia.[1] Govorukhin worked on the film for a long period, spending much of his time in archives, libraries, and film depositories. In 1991, Stanislav Govorukhin published a book which he called The Russia...we Lost (Россия… Которую мы потеряли), which formed the basis of the script of this film. SynopsisThe film contains a large amount of factual information: photos, documents, and newsreels. However, Govorukhin's work is not limited to a statement of facts, but offers his worldview. Standing on the positions of anti-communism, the director largely idealizes tsarist Russia and criticizes Maxim Gorky. Much attention is paid to the personalities of Stolypin, Lenin, Nicholas II.
PerceptionThe film had a strong public response[2] and played a significant role in breaking the mass consciousness of the Soviet people in the early 1990s.[3] The phrase "the Russia we have lost" has become a household term for pre-revolutionary Russia,[4] but is also used as a mockery of the idealization of pre-revolutionary Russia - Especially in internet memes with the title of the film serving as a caption of for unglamorous photographs of serfdom and poverty taken during the Tsarist era, as well as more humorous ones with the title serving as a caption for images depicting dinosaurs in the prehistoric age.[5] References
|