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VHS : National Geographic's Russia's Last Tsar


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starring: National Geographic







Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: VHS Tape
EAN: 9786304840061
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, NTSC
ISBN: 0792238907
Label: Nat'l Geographic Vid
Manufacturer: Nat'l Geographic Vid
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Nat'l Geographic Vid
Release Date: July 08, 1997
Running Time: 65 minutes
Sales Rank: 3605
Studio: Nat'l Geographic Vid
Theatrical Release Date: 1996



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Editorial Review:

Description:
ENTER THE WORLD OF THE DOOMED ROMANOVS. It is a fairy tale and a horror story all at once, and remembering it was all but forbidden...until now. The fabled Romanovs, led by handsome Nicholas II and the devout Empress Alexandra, ruled imperial Russia in high splendor, despite the disintegration of their divided, war-torn country. In 1918, the rise of communism violently collided with the rule of royalty when the tsar, his beloved wife, and their children were murdered and buried in a secret grave. In the new Soviet Union, history was rewritten and the gilded trappings of the Romanovs erased. Now National Geographic Video tells the magnificent, tragic story of the Romanovs, using newly discovered photographs and rare film footage long locked away in official archives. Joyful scenes of Grand Duchess Anastasia winking at the camera on the royal yacht and doomed heir Alexei twirling in the snowy palace garden are juxtaposed with chilling, once-secret footage of the family's bones being unearthed by Soviet authorities. The public majesty, private joys, and terrible fate of the Romanovs are highlighted in extraordinary interviews with those who never stopped searching for the true story of RUSSIA'S LAST TSAR.

Amazon.com:
National Geographic has done its usual highly professional job with this visual account of Czar Nicholas II and his czarina, Alexandra. It features a good deal of interesting newsreel footage of the epoch and a lot of affecting snapshots of their family. Many of the candid snapshots were taken by the czar himself or his daughter, Anastasia. The narration, by the distinguished British actor Jeremy Irons, is quietly effective, although some viewers may find his consistently melancholy tone a bit too funereal. The story of the brutal murder of the imperial family by a Bolshevik firing squad in Ekaterinburg is appropriately shocking, even if no one coached Irons in an acceptable pronunciation of Ekaterinburg. Although the film devotes considerable attention to the controversial identification of the family's remains, it was made in 1995 so it naturally doesn't extend to their eventual burial back in St. Petersburg. More surprisingly, the film does not address the question of the bodies missing from the family burial site and, especially, the fate of Anastasia, which so aroused the public's interest for 70 years.

There are a few glimpses of Lenin rallying the masses against the ancient regime and some views of the Russian Army in disorderly retreat. However, in spite of some references to the czar's avoidance of his official duties, the focus is regularly on his role as a loving father and husband. Consequently, the presentation does not perhaps deal adequately with his responsibility for Russia's crushing defeat in World War I and the eventual fall of the Romanov dynasty. Nicholas and Alexandra, loving couple and devoted parents though they were, cannot escape the judgment of history. It seems clear that it was Nicholas's inept leadership and his reliance on his neurotic wife for support and counsel that led to the death of millions of Russian soldiers and thus to the revolutionary debacle. This wiped out the chance that Russia could capitalize on the economic progress it had made at the turn of the century to move forward toward prosperity and a more modern system of governance. Together, with a little help from their friends like Rasputin, they paved the way for Lenin and, eventually, Stalin. --Ed Killham



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - Recycled Imagery; Biased Narration
All - Nicholas II, entire family, Rasputin - are depicted in the same inaccurate, flat caricatures as those created by the Revolutionary propagandists. Anna Vyrubova is not discussed at all, nor does she appear in any of the photography. To give the crumb of credit where it is due, this film does contain bout 2 minutes worth of engaging footage of the Romanov children at play. Otherwise, it offers only still photographs most people interested in Russian history have seen before and often.
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Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - Propaganda
"To the victor go the spoils," including the "right" to revise history. I was disheartened when I saw this film because the greater part of it is Bolshevik propaganda from the Revolution. Sure, there are facts, like dates, locations, little things like that. But instead of truly researching the person of Tsar Nicholas II, the Geographic people were content to simply regurgitate what the party-line of the Soviet Union had been in regards to the Tsar. Obviously this information is very biased. Unfortunately, ... Read More



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - A Biography of the family
Tells mostly about the Czar and family what led to there exicution




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