Sample Essay on:
Best Foreign Film of 1980 -- “Moskva Slezam ne Verit ”

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Essay / Research Paper Abstract

This 14 page report discusses “Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears” the winner of the Academy Award for the Best Foreign Film in 1980. The movie presents the sort of tale that has been told for centuries. A small town girl goes to the big city, gets pregnant, is all alone in the world, has her baby and struggles on, only to fall in love with yet another man who treats her like garbage. Her’s is the major story despite the fact that two other young women also have their stories told in the movie. The movie is also compared to a similar but much less impressive American movie -- “Where the Heart Is.” Bibliography lists 3 sources.

Page Count:

14 pages (~225 words per page)

File: D0_BWmoscow.rtf

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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:

and police systems and instead became a controlling and terrifying factor in the daily lives of the general population. Bibliography lists 5 sources. BWmoscow.wps Security Affairs in Eastern Europe and Moscow after 1945 for - June 2000 -- for more information on using this paper properly! Introduction At the end of World War II a set of once great powers and recent enemies found themselves between two new superpowers, and with an unnaturally weakened Germany still in their midst. It is always difficult to understand the most fundamental changes in the dynamics of international relations that change history as they are taking place. Usually, it is only with the clarity of hindsight that the importance and the impact of such changes come into focus. With the end of the Cold War, it became more readily apparent that the security systems in place in the Soviet Union and Eastern European nations were instrumental in the political, social, and economic development of the post-war world. Such systems far outweighed the role and function of the traditional military and police systems and instead became a controlling and terrifying factor in the daily lives of the general population. The Soviet View of Security Throughout the thirties Soviet leaders viewed their country as being surrounded by capitalist enemies whose aggressive plans represented a constant threat to Soviet security. Of course, after Hitlers rise to power and during the period of "collective security" of the mid-thirties, the Soviet attitude toward France, England, and the eastern European countries changed considerably, but distrust of possible English and French anti-Soviet "intrigues" never completely disappeared. However, the Soviet Unions diplomatic isolation in Europe ended after Hitler ...

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