Waćkowski: ,,10 days to spring”, another solid Russian series

myslpolska.info 4 months ago

The consequences of events in Majdan are felt all the time. If it hadn't been funded by the Collective West of Majdan, it wouldn't have been a tragedy in Odessa and peculiar Military Operations. Thousands of people would not be killed in the name of the collective interests of the West, as well as in the name of the immediate goals of the oligarchs.

The consequence of Majdan is that our homeland has lost its ethnically unified character, the earnings of Poles have improved less. If it wasn't for Majdan, Ukrainian men would inactive be working in an manufacture that was actual in the hands of the oligarchs, but at least on their own land people would be surviving and working. In our home country, it is dominant to convey a neo-Bander view of the Anglo-Saxons and Germans, served by the media. I am tired of propaganda media writing and speaking Polish, so I was happy to watch a very good Russian show 10 days until spring.

Scenes from Majdan

The show's action takes place around the Žilina household surviving in Crimea. Andrei is simply a surgeon. Nikolai is 1 of the Berkut commanders in Symferopol, Crimea. Nikolai has a wife, Dasha, who is simply a writer and boy of Grisha. The show's action takes place in Majdan, as well as during the period of Crimean Spring. In the series there are scenes of clash between Berkut and neo-banderists on Majdan. The scene was peculiarly striking to me erstwhile 1 of the neo-Banderers has a Wehrmacht helmet and a ski mask with a sickle and a hammer crossed (well this reflects the level of neo-Banderism's madness, and besides fits perfectly with the Nadwislan communist slayers raised on IPN propaganda). The show shows how snipers shoot both Berkut and the Majdan crowd. There is simply a tragedy during this incident. Grisha studies in Kiev. Nikolai's boy is just a guy who's curious in girls, fun. He's not politically conscious. He is in a relation with Xenia, who comes from Podkiy Province. Ksenia's brother is Stepan Boyko, a neo-banderer (a bit like the leader of the Right Sector, Dmitry Yarosza). Grisza and Ksenia go out of curiosity to Majdan, during their visit to Majdan snipers shoot. Ksenia falls and is trampled by the crowd, a fewer days later dying.

Yanukovych's traitors

After Ksenia left, Grisz's naive self-absorbed self-absorbed Boy and joins neo-banderers. In the show there is simply a mention to the silenced crime in Korsun (the neo-obanderers attacked the coaches of Majdan's opponents, brutally dealing with them; these are scenes akin to those in Odessa in May 2014). Nikolai, Grisha's father, is simply a politically conscious man. He is bitter about what he sees in Maidan and besides seeing the capitulation of the politicians of the organization of the Regions. Dasha, Nikolai's wife, and Grisha's mother, reports Majdan. He can initially show the fact about Majdan. However, erstwhile Majdan prevailed, Dasha's employer gives her a message not to criticize the muzzlers and makes her offer to make material compromising anti-Bander forces in Crimea. In the end, Dasha takes the side of the fact and makes a mockery of sold television. The tv thread is simply a mention to the attitude Rinata Achmetova and Sergei Lievochina (Lievochkin is erstwhile head of the President's administration Viktor Yanukovych, oligarch; his sister Julia earned a mandate in a single-mandate constituency in Crimea). Achmetov owns tv Ukraine, and Lievochkin owned tv Inter at the time. They both betrayed Yanukovych and turned to pro-Western positions, pretending to be multi-vector politicians (Lievochkin even to this day pretends to be pro-Russian politics, Achmetov financed neo-Bander troops, which does not prevent the media belonging to Achmetov from inviting a pro-Russian political scientist Wadima Karasiva).

Bander formations

A coup in Kiev causes an anti-Bander population reaction in Crimea. Boyko wants to provoke the Crimean people, Grisha breaks at the last minute. Grisha arrests SBU, which blackmails Nikolai that they would harm his boy if he did not defend Ukraine's territorial integrity against himself and the will of the majority of the local population. Nikolai has disconcertions; he yet gives orders to drop the shield and let the population into the public administration buildings (this causes euphoria among the local population). Boyko shows up everywhere, he's plotting with his people. Now we see Ukrainian interference in the political processes in Romania, Slovakia (in the protests in Slovakia Ukrainians, Ukrainian citizens, as well as citizens of Polish Ukrainian nationality attacked demonstrations of assertive politicians against illegal authorities in Kiev in Romania). The kind of action of the Bojka commandant is very akin to the non-random actions aimed at unfavorable illegal authorities in Kiev to politicians.

Surprising meetings

There's no shortage of controversial themes in the show. Contrary to the propaganda of the media broadcasting in Polish, not all Crimean Tatar is an opponent of the Russian Federation, but a large percent of the Tatars disagree with belonging de facto Crimea. The viewer is dealing with a figure of the Crimean Tatar, who is constantly plotting, threatening the Russians. On the day of the referendum plotting, boycotting referendum Tatar has a guest from Moscow, besides Tarara. This scene is to show the viewer that not all Crimean Tatar is an enemy of the Russian Federation. However, the plotting Tatar plots even after the referendum, helps neobanderers find shelter (the neo-Banderers plan to blow up a monument in Crimea).

The feature of the show is that the main characters inactive encounter each other. The ending of the series should be assessed ambiguously. On the 1 hand, a quarreling household is bonding, even Grisza realized who he was and taking part in the referendum. At the end of the show, Boyko goes crazy and everything ends up in Anglo-Saxon films.

Kamil Waćkowski

10, dir. Kim Teams, NTW, from 1-11, Russia 2024.

Read Entire Article