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In the great movie, "The Stuntman" an escaped prisoner (Steve Railsback) stumbles onto a movie set where they're filming a WWI movie. The director of the film played Peter O'Toole seizes the opportunity to use Railsback as a stunt man in his film. O'Toole and his wild production crew turn reality on it's head, as Railsback veers back and forth from his movie life to so called real life.
We look at some footage from a 2017 Ukrainian movie called, "Heroes Never Die" that sells the idea of war and patriotism through the lens of a Ukrainian war film that's part predictive programming, part embellishment of an actual event and almost 100% propganda.
We look at some scenes from the film and juxtapose it with footage from a bouncer from England, traveling through Ukraine, videotaping a lot purposeful looking sets and set ups, but through his lens, no actual war.
In the great movie, "The Stuntman" an escaped prisoner (Steve Railsback) stumbles onto a movie set where they're filming a WWI movie. The director of the film played Peter O'Toole seizes the opportunity to use Railsback as a stunt man in his film. O'Toole and his wild production crew turn reality on it's head, as Railsback veers back and forth from his movie life to so called real life.
We look at some footage from a 2017 Ukrainian movie called, "Heroes Never Die" that sells the idea of war and patriotism through the lens of a Ukrainian war film that's part predictive programming, part embellishment of an actual event and almost 100% propganda.
We look at some scenes from the film and juxtapose it with footage from a bouncer from England, traveling through Ukraine, videotaping a lot purposeful looking sets and set ups, but through his lens, no actual war.