this post was submitted on 07 Sep 2025
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chapotraphouse
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The romanovs, famous smol bean rulers who were unjustly overthrown by rasputin and nobody else
I've always been astounded by that movie, the fact that a Western corpo media company had a chance, in the 90s, to portray communism as inarguably the villain, in a children's film, which tend to be subject to far less scrutiny than adult media, and they didn't do it.
But, then, they'd have had to give Lenin a badass villain song. Which would absolutely have been the Let It Go of its day. And obviously no one wanted that.
The 90s resulted in people in the west being way less harsh on communism in fiction, because as far as the west was concerned, communism had "failed." You can't make an intimidating and scary villain who also has an "incompetent" and "failed" ideology behind them. This is why the only communist villains from that time are in stuff like the Red Alert series, silly, campy villains trying to undo and rewrite history, relics of bygone era.
That explains a lot, actually.
This is what they do in the musical adaptation
https://youtu.be/XEQJkx-fl_4
That is... Very good for what it is, in context. More nuance than I'd expect.
I found a YouTube link in your comment. Here are links to the same video on alternative frontends that protect your privacy:
Was Rasputin the spectre of communism all along?
I love spooky stuff so itd be cool but it wouldnt be materialist at all.
Sounds like a cool alternative history story tho, swap Lenin with rasputin and see what happens
Incidentally, this is the plot to the film The King's Man. Including a rad mid-credit scene of Lenin and Hitler chumming it up like, "How do you do, comrade Hitler? You and I are exactly the same, I being Lenin the communist, and you Hitler the fascist. We're going to make a sequel to this World War."
I think if I saw that on screen while enjoying a terrible Cold War movie with my dad, I'd probably accidentally and involuntarily break whatever was in my hand at the time. But then, I've always liked to call myself a "Leninist" and a "Bolshevik", rather than more modern terms, so maybe I'm a little more prone to Lenin's cult of personality than most modern Western commies.