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Co-directed by Godard with the Dziga Vertov group in 1969, 'Pravda's a direct attack to revisionism and socialist imperialism. With his usual collage of images taken from real life, the film's structured as a letter whic...
Co-directed by Godard with the Dziga Vertov group in 1969, 'Pravda's a direct attack to revisionism and socialist imperialism. With his usual collage of images taken from real life, the film's structured as a letter whic...
The film's central thesis explicitly promotes a revolutionary Marxist-Leninist/Maoist ideology, critiquing both Western capitalism and Soviet revisionism from a far-left perspective and advocating for proletarian revolution.
Pravda is a political essay film that primarily features individuals reflecting the demographics of its Eastern European subject matter, without any explicit DEI-driven casting. Its narrative focuses on Marxist-Leninist critique of political systems and class, rather than engaging with or critiquing traditional identities or modern DEI themes.
Pravda is a political documentary film that explores ideological themes and the political landscape of Czechoslovakia. It does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes, thus there is no portrayal to evaluate within the scope of this rubric.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
Pravda (1970) is a political essay film and documentary, not a narrative film with established characters. It does not feature any named or plot-relevant characters from source material, history, or previous installments whose gender could be swapped.
Pravda (1970) is a documentary-essay film that does not feature narrative characters with pre-established racial identities from source material or historical figures portrayed by actors. Therefore, the concept of a 'race swap' does not apply.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources