Slava Malamud 🇺🇦🇮🇱 Profile picture
Feb 15, 2021 20 tweets 5 min read Read on X
OK, let's dig into this. (Thread)
1) The example is nonsense and means nothing beyond the fact that our film industry had a tiny makeup budget and absolutely zero aptitude in special effects. It was basically theater on tape and relied on the viewers' ability to suspend disbelief
2) Soviet films were generally much less violent and scary. This was not because we had better morals and viewed the world through more generous eyes. This was because our culture was extremely prudish and staunchly conservative. Scary, violent films were unseemly, "uncultured"..
3) Soviet sci-fi films and literature were heavily ideological and had to show benevolent, communist Earthlings carrying the light of science and progress to outer space. Most of it was EXTREMELY dull. Some of the best ones (by Strugatsky brothers and Bulychyov) did show conflict
4) Speaking of Bulychyov, the above graphic shows one alien from "Guest From the Future", based on his book "100 Years Ahead." That alien appears in one scene. These two are major characters. This was truly all we could do with special effects. Image
5) To underscore this, in Bulychyov's novel, one of these "space pirates" is basically a humanoid rat, with small, ugly wings and a poisonous stinger on his tail. But this was well beyond the film industry's ability, so they just slapped a vaguely Darth Vaderish mask on him.
6) Strogatsky brothers' "Progressors" series had the same basic idea as Star Trek, though I'd say it was more realistic, cynical and offered better social commentary on who we are as humans. Of course, the best of their novels were never filmed.
7) But let's get to the point of the original post. How did we see the world beyond our borders? There is indeed a difference. Unlike Americans, who generally cared little about the outside world, we cared quite a lot. Almost an unhealthy amount. But we didn't see it as good.
7.1) We saw the outside world as hostile to us and a bleak, dehumanizing place to live. ImageImage
7.2) We were taught to feel pity to the oppressed nations (African Americans, colonized peoples) but in a very paternalistic way that was meant to showcase the benevolence of the Great Russian People, such as in the film "Maximka". Image
7.3) Ultimately, this view of antiracism has left Russians unprepared to deal with black people on equal terms and has contributed heavily to the current state of affairs in the country, where racism is rampant, white nationalism is state ideology, and "Maximka" is a racial slur
8) One of the images in the OP is from the film "Kin-dza-dza", a darkly humorous masterpiece by the Georgian genius Danelia. The aliens there are entirely human and also horribly repugnant. They are supposed to be amplified reflections of ourselves. This was a Perestroika film.
9) Ultimately, to the extent there was a major difference between mainstream Soviet and US societies, we were more socially conservative and more convinced the world was out to destroy us. But we also cared much more about being liked. We had (and have) an inferiority complex
9.1) We considered ourselves misunderstood and underappreciated, but at the same time thought of our culture as sophisticated, elevated and in the highest taste possible. Some of it was. Most of it was just tabooing sex, violence and real human life and making filmed operettas.
9.2) We dreamed of wooing the West (especially France and England, we thought Americans much to uncouth) with our ballet (success), philharmonic orchestras (success), art (major failure) and films (another one). When it comes to the latter, even our propaganda knew we failed.
9.3) There's still a myth in Russia that even the English themselves think our Sherlock Holmes (played by the very talented Vasily Livanov) was the best. It's based entirely on the fact that Livanov's picture is in the Holmes museum on Baker St. In fact, it's there as a curiosity Image
9.4) Our Sherlock Holmes treatment has its moments, but it suffers from terrible cinematography and lighting and wouldn't pass muster with Western viewers. But we are extremely desperate to register foreign approval. Americans, by contrast, could't be bothered to give two shits.
10) Finally, it is no wonder that, since the Iron Curtain collapsed, Soviet citizens, tired of the neutered state-approved fare, flocked to Western entertainment and consumed it indiscriminately. In the 1980s, illicit "video salons" were all the rage...
10.1) They usually showed two genres of films: "pornukha" (soft porn and erotica, which to us was basically any view of an exposed breast) and "boyevik" (violent action). When I saw Running Man with @Schwarzenegger in 1988, my entire world was turned on its head. I was in awe.
10.2) The end result of this clash of cultures (and our insecurities) is that basically all high-budget film industry in Russia is one comically inept attempt after another to provide "our answer to Hollywood." Thankfully, most Russians are cynical enough to see it for what it is
11/x) The moral of the story is: please, don't judge either the American or the Soviet culture (both unique, occasionally tortured but extremely complex) on something as transparently silly as simplistic memes. It's an insult to those who lived, and live, in both.

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More from @SlavaMalamud

Oct 8, 2023
I am an atheist Jew. I believe my people deserve a state of their own, not because some infanticidal porkophobic fairy tale villain has promised it to us, but because we have fucking earned it with 2000 years of unimaginable suffering and persecution.
We. Deserve. It.
Don't agree? Suck on our nuclear warhead.
Ethno-states are bad, but our circumstance is special. Don't agree? Think it's hypocritical? Shouldn't have persecuted us for 2000 years, bitch. Suck on the abovementioned warhead and shut up.
So, with these non-negotiables out of the way
Here is my idea outcome:
1) Hamas - dead. To the last pigfuck. Dead and buried and then dug up and killed again and fucking dead.
2) Two states. Palestine gets its own borders and a functioning government, and the whole world helps them with it so it's sustainable and livable.
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Jul 14, 2023
On the subject of "good Russians", hopefully once and for all...
And, trust me, I am not speaking as a dispassionate outsider. I am married to a Russian citizen, after all.
So, here is my take on what should be the minimally acceptable position taken by anyone with a 🇷🇺 passport
This, of course, isn't for anyone who is actively pro-war and pro-Putin or has taken the cop-out position of "I just want the war to end", "all sides are to blame", "can't we just negotiate" or "this is politics."
These Russians are abhorrent and culpable of abetting war crimes.
However, if you are anti-war and anti-Putin, here is what you should NOT say:
* "This is Putin's war, stop blaming all Russians",
* "Collective responsibility is Nazism",
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* "Ukrainian propaganda is no better than Putin's",
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Jul 12, 2023
A Russian man waiting in line in a health center lost consciousness. Nobody gives a shit. Not a single person.
This is an absolutely normal reaction in Russia, and was so in the Soviet Union when I was growing up. Human life is garbage. One less, one more, who cares.
If you are visiting Russia, the best advice I can give you: never, ever have a heart attack outside. People will just assume you are a drunk and give you a wide berth. You may get picked up by a cop, but more likely, you'll just be left where you are.
Nobody will bat and eye.
In 1991, while waiting for a bus in Izmaylovo, Moscow, I saw a severely drunk man stumbling around on the pedestrian isle in the middle of a busy road. He seemed certain to fall right under the wheels of a passing vehicle. I came over to help him across the street...
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Jul 10, 2023
In today's issue of Great Russian Culture Discovered, Russia's most popular song of all time.
It's "Rise Up, Holy Russia" by z-singer Yan Osin. In the 🧵 below is my word-for-word translation. I challenge the people I've tagged to find a single flaw in it.
https://t.co/hLlozJ7ZGi
Image
If they do (also attn: @AlexKombarov), I promise to resign my position in NAFO Propaganda Department, of which I am the president and the entire staff.
This schlager (a German word Russians use for their most popular patriotic hymns) has probably topped every single Russian chart Image
"The war has come, the war is on
Rise up, my holy Rus, come on
It is our fate, from our God
To show Ukies Stalingrad!

We've done this many times before
We come, like Uncle Chernomor
Donbas is ours, so is Warsaw
We'll fight to England's very shore Image
Read 10 tweets
Jul 1, 2023
So, anyway, I am a public school teacher in Baltimore, and I would like to have a short conversation about merit and meritocracy.
While the case I will present here is not a of any single student in particular, it is not a hypothetical. This is literally what I see every day...
So, you are a black high school student in a city whose reputation from "The Wire" is thoroughly earned. Let's also make you a female, just for kicks. And, since we are talking specifically about college admissions, we will make you a black female with goals and aspirations...
This being Baltimore, you are more likely than not to be from a low-income family. And since we are speaking of likelihoods, by "family" I mean a single mother, who is, let's say, not doing well, and at least one sibling.
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Jun 27, 2023
So, yes, let's address that "Russian speakers in the East and South of Ukraine who are pro-Russian" talking point you see bandied about by the @elonmusk's of the world.
Like all Russian propaganda, it has a basic, solid truth in its core, with cotton candy of lies spun around it.
Russian-speaking Ukrainians exist, in fact, everywhere in Ukraine, even in the West. Volodymyr Zelensky, as is widely known, is a Russian-speaking Jew from the central Ukrainian city of Kryvyi Rih.
And yes, some Russian speakers, in 2014, strongly sympathized with Russia...
... even to the point of wanting to live in Russia. This, by the way, has changed for many of them over the course of the Russo-Ukrainian War (many have become ambivalent, many more are violently anti-Russian now), but it's an extremely nuanced subject that needs a separate convo
Read 12 tweets

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