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- The story of the Soviet Union's famed Red Army hockey team through the eyes of its players.
- The film outlines Japanese students movements in the 60s, then shows the formation of the Japanese United Red Army, a communist armed resistance group.
- Tony was the leader of a notorious London Hooligan firm, but whilst fighting a Russian ultra he sustains a head injury and must sit out some of the fun. The football World Cup 2018 in Russia is looming and he wants to organize some payback.
- Twenty years prior to the Revolutionary War, the British, French and Native American Empires seek to possess the American wilderness. Conflict ignites as 22-year-old George Washington steps onto the world stage as the murderer of a French emissary. In the subsequent battle of Fort Necessity, the emissary's brother leads a French army that defeats Washington. These events lead to the 1755 campaign of British General Edward Braddock and George Washington against the French in the wilderness. With the British a day away, a charismatic French officer leads his French/Indian force in an improbable attack on Braddock's column. The resulting battle will change American history.
- As a battle rages in the highlands of Scotland, two unlikely allies unite to defeat an invading army.
- September 1977. The Japanese man speaks in halting English; the Bangladeshi negotiator, with the clipped confidence of an army officer. A color scheme suggests order in the exchange: green, red, and the occasional white. But underneath the schema of a dark screen-subtitle sans image-lies a waiting unraveling. The Japanese Red Army had attached to the Palestinian cause, and through that to an idea of global pan-Arabism. But the high-value hostage turned out to be an Armenian banker from California, and the Democratic Party Congressman on honeymoon negotiated a call to the White House, only to be greeted by Jimmy Carter's answering service. The hostage terrain was not an "Islamic Republic," as the hijackers thought, but a turbulent new country ricocheting between polarities and imploding in the process. Two years earlier, the country had gone through a trio of military coups, decimating, in turn, the country's founder and Prime Minister Mujibur Rahman, his family, a group of freedom-fighter army officers, and finally, a Leftist insurgency group within the army. Instead of being the willing platform for the Japanese Red Army's ideas of "Third World revolution," the actual Third World hit back in unexpected ways, turning the hijackers into helpless witnesses. The lead negotiator, code name "Dankesu," says with baffled understatement and halting English: "I understand you have some internal problems." An eight-year-old watches the television screen with growing confusion-the screen shows an unmoving control tower for hours on end, and he wants his favorite show to start again. United Red Army premiered at the Sharjah Biennial in 2011. Sarinah Masukor described the film's structure, specifically the archival images, as "ever on the verge of collapsing into abstraction, their materiality performs the indeterminacy of the event they record" (West Space). The film is in the collections of the Tate Modern Museum (UK) and the Kiran Nadar Museum (India).
- Idriss Koné, aka Birco Clinton, lives in an asbestos container in the eastern suburbs of Naples and has a dream: to become the king of the coupé décalé in Europe. To be able to succeed he has created L'armée rouge, a band of boys from the Ivory Coast that supports him and helps him to organize his parties. The documentary is a glance from inside in the Black community in Naples and, despite the actual political situation in the country, gives account of a daily history which is written by the real people. The result is a almost surrealistic account of the gap between politics and real world.
- In a provincial small town tank part of Red Army arrives for realization of tactical employments. One of commanders takes off a room for a local habitant - student Tonya Zhukova.
- A tribute to the red Army, to celebrate the civil war victory in 1948.
- An exact reproduction of the work of the Red Cross Society during an engagement. These brave men are rushing around on the battlefield with stretchers, picking up the wounded and hurrying them off to a place of safety. Officers on horseback are giving orders for the handling of the unfortunates. A wounded officer falls from his horse and is picked up and placed on a stretcher and carried off, the horse following behind with bowed head. A very pathetic scene.
- Colonel Violet finds another dragon ball for the Red Ribbon Army, and Goku flies to the army's headquarters to launch a one-man-assault and take their dragon balls. When Bulma and the others discover Goku's plan they call Yamcha to pick them up, hoping that they can reach the Red Ribbon stronghold in time to help him.
- Episode: (2011)2011–Podcast Episode
- 2019–TV EpisodeHistorian Prit Buttar has written several excellent books on the Eastern Front in WWII and we are delighted he is bringing his unrivaled knowledge of the Red Army and its campaigns to WW2TV. He will talk about the Red Army progressing from an old-fashioned outdated force to a modern army by 1944.
- 2017–TV Episode
- 2018–TV Episode
- Joseph McCarthy searches for communist infiltrators in the U.S. government. He lands on a big target, one that earns him a formidable enemy.
- Episode: (2020)2015– 39mPodcast Episode
- 2015– 47mPodcast Episode
- Episode: (2021)2020– 41mPodcast Episode
- 2020– 6mPodcast Episode
- 2017– 1h 28mPodcast Episode
- 2017– 1h 11mPodcast Episode
- 1977TV-PGTV EpisodeThe J.A.K.Q. face off against warriors set up to take them down or blow them up doing so.
- 1999– 52mPodcast Episode
- Episode: (2020)2009– 56mPodcast Episode
- 2020– 1h 33mPodcast Episode
- 2019–TV EpisodePart of Eastern Front Week on WW2TV Red Army Deep Battle / Deep Operations: 1943/44 Benjamin Claremont is a PhD candidate at the University of St Andrews' Institute for the Study of War and Strategy. In today's show Ben will be looking at how the Red Army implemented Deep Battle / Deep Operations in 1943-44, through the lens of the Forward Detachment on the basis of lessons learned earlier in the war. This discussion will provide insight into the mechanics of the large scale Soviet offensives and how they functioned to enable Soviet success in the exploitation. People often think about them as this giant armored fist bashing through German defenses, but they were actually enabled by these relatively small highly mobile and aggressive forward detachments far ahead of the main body of forces like fingers outstretched from a palm. Their work to destabilize and fragment the cohesion of the German defensive system is really the tactical enabler of the large scale (operational) success in the Soviet method (i.e. Deep Battle/Deep Operations).
- Part of Eastern Front Week on WW2TV The Red Army Storms into Europe: Combat, Violence, and Discipline on the Eastern Front, 1944-1945 Vojin Majstorovic is an historian with a specialization in the Soviet Union's Red Army. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Toronto in 2017. His research focusses on Soviet involvement in the Balkans and Central Europe in the 1940s. He has held fellowships at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and at the Centre for Holocaust Studies at the Institute for Contemporary History in Munich. In this show we will explore the explosion of what Red Army officers called "military violations:" straggling, deserting, looting, and assaulting civilians. With a focus on the 2nd and 3rd Ukrainian Fronts, which fought in the Balkans and Central Europe. Vojin's research suggests that troops wreaked havoc against civilian populations in "enemy" countries, looting, raping, and murdering on a large scale in "enemy" Romania, Hungary, and Austria, whereas they behaved with more restraint in "neutral" Bulgaria and "friendly" Yugoslavia.
- 2019–TV EpisodeNon-Standard Cadres: "Non-Russians" and "Girls" in the Red Army Part of Minorities in WWII Week on WW2TV Brandon Schechter is an Adjunct Professor and Research Affiliate at The Harriman Institute and History Department, Columbia University. Author of The Stuff of Soldiers: A History of the Red Army in World War II Through Objects (Cornell, 2019).
- 2017– 2h 23mPodcast Episode
- 2021– 44mPodcast Episode
- 2011– 53mPodcast Episode