Lego WWII: The Little Match Girl
Yet another Lego brick film animation. This time it is some sort of an adaptation based on the Little Match Girl, a short story written by Hans Christian Andersen but with some minor differences. Considered it my own version of it. This version is set in The Soviet Union during World War II, that is one of the major differences. Another big difference is that the father does care about the match girl. Since I don’t like the original concept of the father.
It is a period of war and great unrest. Everyone is affected, from children till the elders. Families are seperated as fathers, brothers, sons,uncles, grandfathers, grandsons all have go to the front, some of them will never return and their faces will disappear from their society. The people who are left behind have no other choice than hope for their love ones to return.
But hope is cruel…...
The fourth part of the Lego war series where the aspects of war are about to be explored. Since The best gifts are the ones you share with the people you love and care the most.
This is actually the second video that is based on a semi-real event, the other was the one about the Second Sino-Japanese war as this video is set in the Eastern Front in the winter of 1941/42.
If you like this video then make sure to leave a like, comment and subscribe to my channel for more awesome brickfilms.
NOTES:
-At the beginning you see Chinese and Japanese fighting, not Germans and/or British.
-The uniforms aren’t 100% accurate, especially the Russians, but I’m not going to waste money on something I only plan to use once.
IMPORTANT:
Don’t go political and shouting propaganda or hate speech in the comment section. That is not what this video is about as this shows the worst and struggle of mankind in battle, this video is not about whose side is good or bad. Any comment that violate this notice will be removed without warning, since people either don’t read this.
MUSIC LIST:
In The Rain…………………………………………………..…..By MachinimaSound.com
Clash Defiant………………………………………………..…..By Kevin Macleod
Shadowlands 1 - Horizon………………………………..……By Kevin Macleod
Dreams Become Real……………………………………….....By Kevin Macleod
Ghostpocalypse - 6 Crossing the Threshold……………...By Kevin Macleod
Colorless Aura…………………………………………………..By Kevin Macleod
Industrial Music Box…………………………………………...By Kevin Macleod
Touching Moments Four - Melody…………………………..By Kevin Macleod
Gone Beyond…………………………………………………....By Kevin Macleod
Fairytale Waltz…………………………………………………..By Kevin Macleod
Somewhere Sunny (ver 2)...................................................By Kevin Macleod
Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
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Russia opens new Stalin museum
(18 Dec 2015) RESTRICTION SUMMARY: AP CLIENTS ONLY
AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Khoroshevo, Tver region - 9 December 2015
++16:9++
1. Wide of a group arriving for a tour to the museum commemorating former Soviet leader Joseph Stalin
2. Wide of exhibit of a reconstructed room from a typical Russian house from 1940s
3. Mid of museum director Lidiya Kozlova giving a tour
4. Close of a book on a table with title page reading (Russian) Table Calendar 1941
5. Mid of a radio and a samovar
6. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Lidiya Kozlova, Director of the museum:
For our region it's a big event. According to the documents it was Stalin's only visit to the front. And it happened in this region. Here this museum tells about the events that happened near the city of Rzhev during the days of the Great Patriotic War (Russian term for World War Two) and about the events that happened at the Rzhevsko-Vyazemsky bridgehead where Nazis ruled for almost 14 months. And here everywhere around, as Mikhail Ivanovich Nozhkin (a Soviet actor and writer) said, great, tough and long battles were happening.
7. Wide of exhibit of room
8. Mid of Kozlova giving a tour
9. Mid of a painting of Stalin
10. Tilt down of photos of Stalin
11. Mid of visitors
12. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Lidiya Kozlova, Director of the museum:
Each of us wants our state to be strong. And I always ask the following question: Can a strong state be ruled by a week president, a week head of the state? It can't be that way. So that the government became strong, the head of state has also to be smart, strong and sometimes even tough. Because today the current situation demands that. And in the time when Joseph Stalin ruled the country, the situation demanded this 100 times more.
13. Wide of tour
14. Mid of two posters, with titles reading (Russian) (left) Tehran and (right) First Fireworks
15. Close of poster
16. Mid of visitors
17. Various of exhibit
18. Wide of another tour outside the museum
19. Close of a bust of Stalin in front of the museum
20. Mid of tour group
21. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Sergei Zubarovsky, tour guide:
We had the gulag. We had other mistakes. People were punished. But our soldiers went into the attack. They were rising for the motherland, for Stalin. And that happened in this region. He is a kind of a flag which lead us to the victory. And he may have had mistakes, but we know them, and our pupils know about these mistakes. We tell them about them, we are not hiding them. And we also say about the glory he brought to us.
22. Wide of a street scene
23. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Vasilisa Lishinskaya, 21-year-old mother of two children:
Whatever the person was, anyway somewhere deep in the soul he is good. And if the commander is good, then he will lead out his troops to the right path.
24. Mid of people crossing the road
25. Various of the city
AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY
FILE: Moscow - exact date unknown
++4:3++
26. Wide of military vehicles in Red Square
27. Various of Stalin
28. Wide of soldiers in Red Square
29. Mid of military vehicles on parade
30. Close of Stalin
STORYLINE:
As the 137th anniversary of the birth of Josef Stalin is marked on Friday, the retelling of the former Soviet leader's triumphs have become increasingly fashionable during troubled times in Russia.
A bust of Stalin stands outside a house-turned-museum in the village of Khoroshevo, in the Tver region, where he is said to have stayed the night on his only visit to the front during World War Two.
Groups of students look around the two-room building where Stalin strategised with his generals in August 1943 as the Red Army battled to drive out the Nazi troops.
===========================================================
Clients are reminded:
You can license this story through AP Archive:
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Lego War: A New World
A Lego brick film stop-motion I made. This time it's about a boy and a girl, struggling to survive the wreckage of a distant and yet harsh world. A new world.
The fifth part of the Lego War series, where the aspects of war are about to be explored.
Two nations on a distant planet waged war and as a result they wipe each other out by an all-out nuclear war, with the only purpose to insure the destruction of both the rival and their own nation. As soon the bombs felt no one survived.
At least that's what they expected...
It is set on a distant planet and it's not based on a historical event, like WWI or WWII. Just because it's set on a distant planet, doesn't mean their technology is advance compared to the modern world. So no need to say this is set in the second world war (Although most weapons are from that era) It is based on an episode of the ''Twilight Zone'' called: ''Two'', but it is also loosely based and inspired on the anime and manga of: ‘’Girl’s Last Tour (Shōjo Shūmatsu Ryokō)
IMPORTANT
Any resemblance of historical factions and gear is pure conical.
Music List:
Heart of Nowhere..............................By Kevin Macleod
Moorland...........................................By Kevin Macleod
Colorless Aura....................................By Kevin Macleod
Hero Down..........................................By Kevin Macleod
Floating Cities.....................................By Kevin Macleod
Fairytale Waltz.....................................By Kevin Macleod
Isolated................................................By Kevin Macleod
Reign Supreme......................................By Kevin Macleod
Satiate Strings.......................................By Kevin Macleod
Noble Race.............................................By Kevin Macleod
Laid Back Guitars.....................................By Kevin Macleod
Dark Times..............................................By Kevin Macleod
Dreams Become Real...............................By Kevin Macleod
Road to Hell.............................................By Kevin Macleod
Ghostpocalypse - 7 Master.......................By Kevin Macleod
Bittersweet.............................................By Kevin Macleod
Decline....................................................By Kevin Macleod
Gone Beyond...........................................By Kevin Macleod
Crusade...................................................By Kevin Macleod
Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
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D-Day Omaha Beach - A Lego Movie by Morrison Brother Productions (2016)
This is our first brickfilm release from 2016. View our newest Civil War film (IRON) here!
Check out our website: morrisonbrickfilms.com
Here's the trailer to our latest film (IRON):
About this Film:
Many years later, a WWII veteran recounts his dangerous experiences during the Normandy Invasion. Follow along as our hero hits the bloody sands of Omaha Beach, and fights his way through the heavily fortified German defenses. Full of combat action scenes and special effects, this stop motion animation film will captivate audiences and honor those who gave their last full measure of devotion.
Российская Империя: Екатерина II, часть 1. [04/16] [Eng Sub]
Российская Империя. Екатерина II. Часть первая.
* Происхождение принцессы Софьи-Фредерики-Августины, будущей Екатерины Великой, её приезд в Россию.
* Свержение с престола мужа — императора Петра III.
* Превращение дворянства в привилегированное соcловие. История Салтычихи.
* Русско-турецкие войны, присоединение Крыма к России, штурм Измаила.
* Насаждение картошки в России.
* Екатерина — воспитательница внуков. Фавориты императрицы.
* Пугачёвский бунт.
Российская Империя: Николай I, часть 1. [09/16] [Eng Sub]
Российская Империя. Николай I. Часть первая.
* Восстание декабристов, воцарение Николая I.
* Русская классика — Пушкин, Глинка, Брюллов.
* Русско-персидская война, убийство Грибоедова.
* Первые российские железные дороги.
* Всесильная русская бюрократия.
* Антироссийское восстание в Польше.
Zaporizhia
Zaporizhia, or Zaporozhye) is a city in southeastern Ukraine, situated on the banks of the Dnieper River. It is the administrative center of the Zaporizhia Oblast. Administratively, it is incorporated as a city of oblast significance and serves as an administrative center of Zaporizhia Raion, though it does not belong to the raion. Currently the city is the sixth largest in Ukraine. Population: 770,672 (2013 est.).
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Russian literature
Russian literature refers to the literature of Russia and its émigrés and to the Russian-language literature of several independent nations once a part of what was historically Rus', Russia or the Soviet Union. Roots of Russian literature can be traced to the Middle Ages, when epics and chronicles in Old Russian were composed. By the Age of Enlightenment, literature had grown in importance, and from the early 1830s, Russian literature underwent an astounding golden age in poetry, prose and drama. Romanticism permitted a flowering of poetic talent: Vasily Zhukovsky and later his protégé Alexander Pushkin came to the fore. Prose was flourishing as well. The first great Russian novelist was Nikolai Gogol. Then came Ivan Turgenev, who mastered both short stories and novels. Leo Tolstoy and Fyodor Dostoyevsky soon became internationally renowned. In the second half of the century Anton Chekhov excelled in short stories and became a leading dramatist. The beginning of the 20th century ranks as the Silver Age of Russian poetry. The poets most often associated with the Silver Age are Konstantin Balmont, Valery Bryusov, Alexander Blok, Anna Akhmatova, Nikolay Gumilyov, Osip Mandelstam, Sergei Yesenin, Vladimir Mayakovsky, Marina Tsvetaeva and Boris Pasternak. This era produced some first-rate novelists and short-story writers, such as Aleksandr Kuprin, Nobel Prize winner Ivan Bunin, Leonid Andreyev, Fedor Sologub, Aleksey Remizov, Yevgeny Zamyatin, Dmitry Merezhkovsky and Andrei Bely.
After the Revolution of 1917, Russian literature split into Soviet and white émigré parts. While the Soviet Union assured universal literacy and a highly developed book printing industry, it also enforced ideological censorship. In the 1930s Socialist realism became the predominant trend in Russia. Its leading figure was Maxim Gorky, who laid the foundations of this style. Nikolay Ostrovsky's novel How the Steel Was Tempered has been among the most successful works of Russian literature. Alexander Fadeyev achieved success in Russia. Various émigré writers, such as poets Vladislav Khodasevich, Georgy Ivanov and Vyacheslav Ivanov; novelists such as Mark Aldanov, Gaito Gazdanov and Vladimir Nabokov; and short story Nobel Prize winning writer Ivan Bunin, continued to write in exile. The Khrushchev Thaw brought some fresh wind to literature and poetry became a mass cultural phenomenon. This thaw did not last long; in the 1970s, some of the most prominent authors were banned from publishing and prosecuted for their anti-Soviet sentiments.
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Building a LEGO WW2 Military MOC LIVE! German Vs American!
Today we build a LEGO WW2 German Vs American Battle! This MOC was very simple but, personally I think it looks really freaking good! Let me know what you think in the comments! I might build this MOC but on a larger scale soon!
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Piano Tutorial Sheet - 06 - TCHAIKOVSKY - June - Barcarolle - HD
Piano Sheet:
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840–1893)
The Seasons Op 37a - June - Barcarolle
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Felix Mendelssohn's Venetian Gondola Songs from his Songs Without Words come to mind when listening to Tchaikovsky's Barcarolle but, whereas Mendelssohn places a relatively simple single voice line over an ‘undulating’ accompaniment, Tchaikovsky puts more emphasis on polyphonic thematic development over a contrapuntal accompaniment. Barcarolle along with Troika are the most often-heard pieces from the set.
Seasons, Op. 37a (also seen as Op. 37b; Russian: Времена года; published with the French title Les Saisons) is a set of twelve short Character Pieces for solo piano by the Russian composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. Each piece is the characteristic of a different month of the year in the northern hemisphere. The work is also sometimes heard in orchestral and other arrangements by other hands. Individual excerpts have always been popular – Troika (November) was a favourite encore of Sergei Rachmaninoff, and Barcarolle (June) was enormously popular and appeared in numerous arrangements (for orchestra, violin, cello, clarinet, harmonium, guitar and even mandolin)
Tchaikovsky did not devote his most serious compositional efforts to these pieces; they were composed to order, and they were a way of supplementing his income. He saw the writing of music to a commission as just as valid as writing music from his own inner inspiration, however for the former he needed a definite plot or text, a time limit, and the promise of payment at the end. Most of the pieces were in simple ABA form, but each contains a minor melodic masterpiece.
The 12 pieces with their subtitles are:
1. January: At the Fireside (A major)
2. February: Carnival (D major)
3. March: Song of the Lark (G minor)
4. April: Snowdrop (B-flat major)
5. May: Starlit Nights (G major)
6. June: Barcarolle (G minor)
7. July: Song of the Reaper (E-flat major)
8. August: Harvest (B minor)
9. September: The Hunt (G major)
10. October: Autumn Song (D minor)
11. November: Troika (E major)
12. December: Christmas (A-flat major)
Poetic Epigraphs
Following is a translation of some of the poetic epigraphs contained in the Russian edition (all chosen by the publisher Nikolay Bernard):
1. Janvier (January): Au coin du feu (At the Fireside)
A little corner of peaceful bliss, the night dressed in twilight;
the little fire is dying in the fireplace, and the candle has burned out.
(Alexander Pushkin)
2. Février (February): Carnaval (Carnival)
At the lively Mardi Gras soon a large feast will overflow.
(Pyotr Vyazemsky)
3. Mars (March): Chant de l'alouette (Song of the Lark)
The field shimmering with flowers, the stars swirling in the heavens,
the song of the lark fills the blue abyss.
(Apollon Maykov)
4. Avril (April): Perce-neige (Snowdrop)
The blue, pure snowdrop — flower, and near it the last snowdrops.
The last tears over past griefs, and first dreams of another happiness.
(A. Maykov)
5. Mai (May): Les nuits de mai (Starlit Nights)
What a night! What bliss all about! I thank my native north country!
From the kingdom of ice, snowstorms and snow, how fresh and clean May flies in!
(Afanasy Fet)
6. Juin (June): Barcarolle (Barcarolle)
Let us go to the shore; there the waves will kiss our feet.
With mysterious sadness the stars will shine down on us.
(Aleksey Pleshcheyev)
7. Juillet (July): Chant du faucheur (Song of the Reaper)
Move the shoulders, shake the arms!
And the noon wind breathes in the face!
(Aleksey Koltsov)
8. Août (August): La moisson (Harvest)
The harvest has grown, people in families cutting the tall rye down to the root!
Put together the haystacks, music screeching all night from the hauling carts.
(A. Koltsov)
9. Septembre (September): La chasse (Hunting)
It is time! The horns are sounding!
The hunters in their hunting dress are mounted on their horses;
in early dawn the borzois are jumping.
(A. Pushkin, Graf Nulin)
10. Octobre (October): Chant d'automne (Autumn Song)
Autumn, our poor garden is all falling down,
the yellowed leaves are flying in the wind.
(Aleksey Nikolayevich Tolstoy)
11. Novembre (November): Troïka (Troika)
In your loneliness do not look at the road, and do not rush out after the troika.
Suppress at once and forever the fear of longing in your heart.
(Nikolay Nekrasov)
12. Décembre (December): Noël (Christmas)
Once upon a Christmas night the girls were telling fortunes:
taking their slippers off their feet and throwing them out of the gate.
(Vasily Zhukovsky)