As far as I know, the most well known things of Russian origin amongst the general people are Communism and Tetris (apart from their old fairytales, ballets, music, arts, the Czar etc.), so obviously they should be mashed together, right?
Yesterday, a friend of mine pointed me to the film at the bottom, which features a song, summarising the history of the USSR, set to the melody of the Russian folk song Korobeiniki and using the Tetris game as a metaphore for...well, pretty much anything I guess.
I'm no historian, and it's been years since my last history class on the Soviet Union, though my arm still hurts, thinking back to all those notes we had to take during class. Through my layman's eyes I'd say it's pretty much accurate. I'm actually impressed that they, for instance, reference the crippling effect of the Five-Year Plans, rather than show a uniformly well-oiled machine. Any history majors who can add something/correct me on the subject?
Yesterday, a friend of mine pointed me to the film at the bottom, which features a song, summarising the history of the USSR, set to the melody of the Russian folk song Korobeiniki and using the Tetris game as a metaphore for...well, pretty much anything I guess.
I'm no historian, and it's been years since my last history class on the Soviet Union, though my arm still hurts, thinking back to all those notes we had to take during class. Through my layman's eyes I'd say it's pretty much accurate. I'm actually impressed that they, for instance, reference the crippling effect of the Five-Year Plans, rather than show a uniformly well-oiled machine. Any history majors who can add something/correct me on the subject?