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  1. Historians hypothesize many possible reasons why the Soviet government showed such seemingly inexplicable leniency toward the foreign films. The government may have granted cinemas the right to show the films so they could stay in business after the domestic film industry had declined.

    • Yesenia (Mexico, 1971) This is, perhaps, the most unexpected movie to top the Soviet box office. Furthermore, its viewership figures were truly jaw-dropping: in 1975, when the Mexican romance Yesenia hit Soviet screens, it was watched by a staggering 91.4 million people!
    • The Magnificent Seven (USA, 1960) Although it was rare for American Westerns to reach Soviet screens, The Magnificent Seven became a lucky exception to this rule.
    • Awaara (India, 1951) The film tells the touching story of Raj, who was born in a slum and had to become a thief. In his heart, he is not a criminal and his conscience torments him (besides, he has a rich father).
    • Mackenna's Gold (USA, 1969) American Westerns were largely frowned upon in the USSR, so during the Cold War Soviet film-makers came up with their own version of the genre, red 'Easterns'.
  2. Despite the appalling picture and sound quality, video salons enjoyed enormous popularity, which is not surprising – for millions of Soviet citizens, it was the only opportunity to watch recent...

  3. Apr 4, 2016 · Some films were officially licensed and were quite popular, such as Sun Valley Serenade, Some Like It Hot, The Sandpit Generals etc. You might take a look at the chart here . Where there's only year, that's a Soviet film; foreign and joint-production films are marked with countries.

  4. Aug 29, 2024 · Lenin declared: “The cinema is for us the most important of the arts,” and his government gave top priority to the rapid development of the Soviet film industry, which was nationalized in August 1919 and put under the direct authority of Lenin’s wife, Nadezhda Krupskaya. There was, however, little to build upon.

  5. May 25, 2018 · The article concludes that American movies were more widely disseminated and popular in the Soviet Union than Soviet films were in the United States, primarily due to the strong support of American private film producers and distributors, though also due to the films’ more discreet messages.

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  7. Dec 14, 2017 · Firstly, because films made during the Soviet era are still with us, with a few tragic exceptions. 1 This is the nature of the cinema: films exist, not only long after they are made, but even well after the social and political framework in which they are realised has perished.