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					 			      	Arsenal (1929 film) - Wikipedia
					 			      	 
 Arsenal (Ukrainian: Арсенал, also alternative title January Uprising in Kiev in 1918[1]) is a Soviet war film by Ukrainian director Alexander Dovzhenko. The film was shot at Odessa Film Factory of VUFKU with the camera of legendary cameraman Danyl Demutskyi and using the original https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arsenal_(1929_film)
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					 			      	Arsenal (1929) - IMDb
					 			      	 
 Directed by Aleksandr Dovzhenko.  With Semyon Svashenko, Georgi Khorkov, Amvrosi Buchma, Dmitri Erdman. Set in the bleak aftermath and devastation of the World War I, a recently demobbed soldier, Timosh, returns to his hometown Kiev, after having survived a train wreck. His arrival coincides with a national celebration of Ukrainian freedom, but the festivities are not to last as a disenchanted. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0019649/
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					 			      	Dovzhenko's Arsenal - A Visual Exploration
					 			      	 
 While Arsenal does not possess the same historical breadth as Zvenyhora, it does follow Zvenyhora in having the same seven part episodic division. In the film’s opening titles, Dovzhenko defines the film as a “Historical-Epic”. http://rayuzwyshyn.net/dovzhenko/Arsenal.htm
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					 			      	Arsenal (1928) - Rotten Tomatoes
					 			      	 
 Imaginative tour-de-force by the great Soviet writer/director Alexander Dovzhenko, who uses a barrage of poetic, surreal images to depict the repression of a strike in the Ukraine during the final year of World War I. https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/arsenal
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					 			      	Arsenal (1929) directed by Alexander Dovzhenko • Reviews, film + cast • Letterboxd
					 			      	 
 Set in the bleak aftermath and devastation of the World War I, a recently demobbed soldier, Timosh, returns to his hometown Kiev, after having survived a train wreck. His arrival coincides with a national celebration of Ukrainian freedom, but the festivities are not to last as a disenchanted. https://letterboxd.com/film/arsenal/
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					 			      	Zvenigora/Arsenal – review | Film | The Guardian
					 			      	 
 Philip French praises two parts of Alexander Dovzhenko's trilogy of silent classics about the Ukraine https://www.theguardian.com/film/2011/feb/13/zvenigora-arsenal-philip-french-classic