- 3 weeks ago
- #fullmovies
- #thrillermovies
- #actionmovies
** This is Part 1 of 3**
Washed-up historian Fluke Kelso, a specialist in Soviet studies, is attending a conference in Russia when he is approached by a former NKVD officer who offers him information that could uncover a vast conspiracy. Kelso takes the bait and soon finds himself pursued by the Russian authorities on a dangerous journey to the remote Russian port of Archangel, where he finds evidence of Stalin's final, unimaginable legacy.
Starring - Daniel Craig, Yekaterina Rednikova, Gabriel Macht
Directed by - Jon Jones
Take your seats Ladies and Gents for The Midnight Screening, the best free movies account for fans of Sci-Fi movies, Romance movies, action movies, thriller movies, adventure movies and every movie genre in between. All full english movies and 100% free to watch!
Enjoy (and feel free to crunch your popcorn as loud as you like)
#FullMovies #ThrillerMovies #ActionMovies
Washed-up historian Fluke Kelso, a specialist in Soviet studies, is attending a conference in Russia when he is approached by a former NKVD officer who offers him information that could uncover a vast conspiracy. Kelso takes the bait and soon finds himself pursued by the Russian authorities on a dangerous journey to the remote Russian port of Archangel, where he finds evidence of Stalin's final, unimaginable legacy.
Starring - Daniel Craig, Yekaterina Rednikova, Gabriel Macht
Directed by - Jon Jones
Take your seats Ladies and Gents for The Midnight Screening, the best free movies account for fans of Sci-Fi movies, Romance movies, action movies, thriller movies, adventure movies and every movie genre in between. All full english movies and 100% free to watch!
Enjoy (and feel free to crunch your popcorn as loud as you like)
#FullMovies #ThrillerMovies #ActionMovies
Category
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Short filmTranscript
00:00Telephone?
00:30It's not your fault.
00:33Where are the guards?
00:34When he has girls, he will send them to them.
00:49What is this?
00:52It's a friend of Schmolenkov. He said that something happened to him.
00:56Do you want to go?
01:00Yes, go, go.
01:16Go, go, go!
01:26Let's go!
01:33Let's go!
01:56Let's go!
02:01Stalin knew one thing.
02:04False.
02:07During his reign, 20 million people lost their lives.
02:11Six million were exiled, 18 million were shipped off to the Gulags.
02:15Stalin used to spend his evenings at the Bolshoi.
02:22Or, ironically, watching American westerns in his own private screening room.
02:28Later, before he retired to bed, he'd sign death warrants, sometimes for up to 6,000 people.
02:33And even then, even then, he would write in the margins, not enough.
02:44Make no mistake.
02:46During the years of terror, the Witchfinder general was Stalin himself.
02:49He said, to choose one's victims, to prepare one's plans minutely,
02:57to slake an implacable vengeance and then go to bed,
03:02there is nothing sweeter in the world.
03:04Or, at least the Almaty in the world.
03:05Who are these people?
03:35What's their problem?
03:36They call themselves Aurora.
03:38They're run by an old-school KGB hardliner called Vladimir Mamentov.
03:42Yeah, he tried to man a coup against Gorbachev.
03:45Yeah.
03:46I interviewed him when he came out of prison.
03:48He still thinks the age of Stalin is the golden era.
03:50I apologize.
03:51On behalf of Rosarhee, follow me to bus, please.
03:54Hey, Professor!
03:57You think you know all about Comrade Stalin?
04:02Let me tell you, you don't know shit.
04:07Please, starik!
04:10Follow me to bus, please.
04:13So here we are with our degrees and our double doctorates swanning around Moscow confronting the past.
04:26You know, the Russians don't want to hear about it, you know, because they're still scared shitless of Stalin.
04:30Oh, come on.
04:31No, Fluke has a point.
04:33Unlike Hitler, he was never exorcised.
04:36They never had a Nuremberg or a truth commission like they did in South Africa.
04:40Putin's the new czar.
04:42This is his generation.
04:44Mobile phones, martinis, and Hugo Boss.
04:47What does Stalin mean to them?
04:49Yeah, but Putin's generation doesn't live out in the sticks.
04:51You know what they're saying to each other out there?
04:53Joseph would know how to deal with these terrorists.
04:56Let me see if I can get a table.
05:01You want to go somewhere else for dinner?
05:05What do they call you, Fluke?
05:08Because I was a mistake.
05:11My mother had me when she was 46.
05:14Somebody said the name summed up your career.
05:17Well, that just isn't nice, is it? Italian or sushi?
05:20You know, I think I'm just gonna stick with the group.
05:26Maybe another night?
05:30I live in hope.
05:31I live in hope.
05:49What do you want?
05:52I want someone to hear the truth.
05:56I was there.
06:01The night Stalin lay dying.
06:03I was there.
06:04The night Stalin lay dying.
06:05Mолодой товарищ...
06:06...
06:09...
06:10...
06:12...
06:13...
06:15...
06:17...
06:18Joseph, are you alive?
06:37Thank God!
06:48There I was, driving comrade Beria, chief of the secret police, Stalin's hedge of men.
07:11We left the dachum, the key, drove to the Kremlin, straight to Stalin's private quarters.
07:23Stoy!
07:41Why did Beria choose you?
07:45Well, I was a new boy in the city.
07:49A boy who would keep a secret.
07:55And what did he find?
07:59He came from the room with a folder, with a notebook inside.
08:09Then I drove him to his house.
08:13My dear, you're not hiding a grave.
08:35Get him.
08:37But why didn't Beria kill you?
08:40I mean, he killed thousands for less.
08:43He was a clever buster.
08:47But he made the mistake of thinking everyone else was stupid.
08:56But three months later, they buried him.
09:03So what happened to you?
09:05They beat me and other things.
09:10But I never break.
09:14So then they sent me to the Gulag.
09:19I came out in 69.
09:24The day the Yankees put a man on the moon.
09:31The first thing hit me.
09:36Where was Stalin?
09:40No pictures. No statues.
09:44Where was the respect?
09:47Papu, if this book really exists, it's a piece of history.
09:54What use is history to me?
09:56Well, history like this can sometimes be worth a lot of money.
10:04For you. For you and your family.
10:07I have no family.
10:10Only...
10:13Daughter.
10:16Who screws men like you in clubs.
10:22Well, she won't have to anymore.
10:24This is worth what I think it is.
10:31To Stalin.
10:34I'm just...
10:35Oh, God.
10:38Oh, God.
10:50Wait!
10:51Wait!
11:15Oh, God!
11:16I have no idea.
11:17I have no idea.
11:18Go.
11:19Go.
11:20Go.
11:21Go.
11:22Go.
11:23Go.
11:24Go.
11:25Go.
11:26Go.
11:27Go.
11:29Go.
11:30Tomorrow we must be in lobby by 11.
11:32No one must be ready to please for bus to our board.
11:37Oh, my God. What happened to you?
11:42Research.
11:44What was his name?
11:45It was an old man. He had a story to tell.
11:52This adds like a setup.
11:54Yeah, well, why would he run out on me?
11:56Because he doesn't want it to look like a setup.
11:59He wants you to track him down.
12:02Persuade him.
12:03That's the psychology of a clever fraud.
12:06Remember the Hitler Diaries.
12:08I think he's for real.
12:10Quad volumus credimus libentur, which means...
12:13Yeah, I know what it means.
12:14We always believe what we want to believe.
12:16Thank you, Adolin.
12:18You don't want to hear that, do you?
12:20You want him to lead you to Stalin's unpublished memoirs.
12:24You'll make millions of dollars, rewrite history,
12:27and a choir will sing your praises at Harvard Yard.
12:31Ladies and gentlemen, we have coffee and tea in the annex.
12:37Gentlemen, R.J. O'Brien, Moscow correspondent of SNS.
12:41How you doing?
12:42You gonna film us?
12:44We're just boring people at a boring conference.
12:47You're Dr. Kelso, right?
12:49I read your last book, what was it, three years ago?
12:52Four.
12:53Actually, I believe it was five.
12:54Well, if we're gonna nitpick it for six,
12:56why don't you talk to him Frank?
12:57You always want something to say.
12:59Good morning.
13:00Good morning.
13:01Good morning.
13:02Good morning.
13:03How long did you drink?
13:04I was a student here very recently.
13:07It is out of date.
13:08Yes, I know.
13:09Is it possible that I can renew it?
13:11I'm a professor.
13:12I'm writing a book.
13:13I feel informed.
13:14Send a mail.
13:15Yeah, but I'm leaving Moscow tomorrow.
13:16Can you help me, please?
13:17I will talk to the supervisor.
13:45Are you the Kelso who wrote the book on fall of the Communist Party?
13:54Uh, yes.
13:55Yes, I guess I am.
13:57Great book.
13:58You really stuffed the bastards.
14:01You are, um...
14:04I need everything you've got on the death of Stalin, Yelena.
14:11Statements, eyewitness accounts.
14:14Please, that would...
14:15She will not approve this.
14:17Does she have to know?
14:18Yes.
14:35I found another one.
14:36Page 512.
14:41So, um...
14:43You went to the Moscow State University?
14:46I did, yes.
14:47I spent a lot of time in this library with a girlfriend.
14:50It was warm.
14:59Is this your address?
15:02No.
15:03It is where Barry lived.
15:06You know, they found their human remains in the basement.
15:11Bones.
15:12Good.
15:18What?
15:19What?
15:20He is very busy, ma'am.
15:46I wrote an article on him a few years ago on Dr. Kelso.
15:51I have something very important to tell him.
16:03I remember you. You wrote shit about me.
16:07Well, I'd like to ask you a question.
16:11About what?
16:13About a notebook belonging to Joseph Stalin.
16:23You'd better come.
16:25Hey, sir.
16:26Hey, sir.
16:27Yes, sir.
16:28Yes, sir.
16:29Yes, sir.
16:30Yes, sir.
16:31Yes.
16:32Yes, sir.
16:33Yes, sir.
16:48Turn off.
16:49Hands off.
16:50What's up?
16:52It was a ticket.
16:55It's just I use it for making notes.
16:58I wasn't going to...
17:12So you are part of the gathering of thieves?
17:15Uh, I'm an historian.
17:17I'm not a thief.
17:19Imagine if your country sold its National Archive for a few miserable dollars.
17:29Victor.
17:36The same sickness Regan had.
17:39Uh, I'm sorry.
17:40Keep your pity.
18:03So, Stalin's notebook.
18:07Sounds like bullshit.
18:10No.
18:11It was mentioned in Volkoganov's biography.
18:14His source was Alexei Yepeshev.
18:17A man you knew well.
18:19You wrote his entry in the Book of Heroes.
18:22Yes.
18:24I was with him at the end.
18:28When Gorbachev came to power.
18:32A good time for a decent communist to die.
18:36Did he ever mention the notebook?
18:38Who told you about this?
18:40An eyewitness?
18:41From that time?
18:43Yes.
18:45Name?
18:47No.
18:49I'd rather not give it to you.
18:50So why are you here?
18:52Well, to find out whether it's true or not.
18:57If it exists, it belongs in Russia, not in some Californian university.
19:01We are talking about a great man.
19:02Well, I'm sorry.
19:03I don't share your admiration.
19:04Really?
19:05I think you do.
19:06When he saw his portrait, he almost salivated.
19:07He started inherited the nation with wooden plows.
19:08And left us an empire armed with atomic weapons.
19:09The man who came after him pissed it away.
19:10He saw it coming.
19:11He told them after I've gone.
19:13It was just a man.
19:14He told them after I've gone.
19:15The capitalists will drown you.
19:16I think we could take off.
19:17I thought yes.
19:18It'd be a good idea.
19:19The man who came after him pissed it away.
19:20I thought she was a nightmare.
19:21I thought it was a real thing.
19:22You could take off?
19:23He said, you know myself.
19:24I don't see I need my dreams at all.
19:25and left us an empire armed with atomic weapons.
19:31The man who came after him pissed it away.
19:34He saw it coming.
19:37He told them, after I've gone,
19:40the capitalists will drown you like blind kittens.
19:48You'd like him back, wouldn't you?
19:55Here he is.
20:01Here he is.
20:02What do you know?
20:04By the dress.
20:05Maybe he'll buy it there, where you are, commander?
20:09Very funny.
20:10For this you can't wait.
20:13Only in the open.
20:14The diplomatic protest is not allowed.
20:17He's asked.
20:19Let's go.
20:25Let's go.
20:55Let's go.
21:25Let's go.
21:55Hello?
21:57Hello?
21:59Hello?
22:01Hello?
22:03Hello?
22:05Hello?
22:07Hello?
22:09Hello?
22:11Hello?
22:13Hello?
22:15Hello?
22:17Hello?
22:19Hello?
22:21Hello?
22:23Hello?
22:25Hello?
22:27Hello?
22:29Hello?
22:31Hello?
22:33Hello?
22:35Hello?
22:37Hello?
22:41Hello?
22:43Hello?
22:45Hello?
22:47Hello?
22:49Hello?
22:51Hello?
22:53Hello?
22:55Hello?
22:57Hello?
22:59Hello?
23:01Hello?
23:03Hello?
23:05Hello?
23:07Hello?
23:09Hello?
23:11Hello?
23:13Hello?
23:15Hello?
23:17Hello?
23:19Hello?
23:21Hello?
23:25Hello?
23:27Hello?
23:29Hello?
23:31Hello?
23:33Hello?
23:35Hello?
23:37Hello?
23:39Hello?
23:41Hello?
23:43Hello?
23:45Hello?
23:47Hello?
23:49Hello?
23:51Hello?
23:53Hello?
23:56Hello?
23:57Hello?
23:58Hello?
23:59Hello?
24:00I'm not getting back on Friday.
24:01I'm gonna stay in Moscow.
24:02Something's come up.
24:03So, tell the boys I love them, and then I'll make it up to them.
24:11You know this place?
24:12It's a club.
24:14Disco.
24:15Many girls.
24:22Winston Churchill once described Russia as a...
24:27riddle wrapped up in a mystery inside an enigma.
24:33Well, I like to feel that the last few days we've solved the riddle
24:37and unraveled the mystery
24:39and we're left with the enigma,
24:43which I believe is the...
24:47It's kind of a last night thing.
24:51I didn't think you liked me.
24:53I don't like your type.
24:56And what type is that?
24:58Wonder boy.
25:00You're so used to dazzling people.
25:03You think that talent and looks are your God-given right.
25:06Samuel Taylor...
25:08Well, it's a long time since I've dazzled anybody.
25:13I just want to get laid before I go back to Princeton.
25:16Okay.
25:19Meet me by the lips.
25:20I take issue with his.
25:32Up to you.
25:33Look, just hold this a second, would you?
25:51Look, just hold this a second, would you?
25:56I'm sorry, Mumma.
26:01You total shit!
26:03No!
26:03No!
26:03No!
26:03No!
26:04No!
26:04No!
26:05No!
26:06No!
26:07No!
26:08No!
26:09No!
26:10No!
26:11No!
26:12No!
26:13No!
26:14No!
26:15No!
26:16No!
26:17No!
26:18No!
26:19No!
26:20No!
26:21No!
26:22No!
26:23No!
26:24No!
26:25No!
26:26No!
26:27No!
26:28No!
26:29No!
26:30No!
26:31No!
26:32No!
26:33No!
26:34No!
26:35No!
26:36No!
26:37No!
26:38No!
26:39No!
26:40No!
26:41I'm looking for someone, Rapava works here.
26:42I'm looking for someone, Rapava, who works here.
26:45I love it. What are you drinking?
26:48Bushmoose.
26:50No ice.
26:56Driving bartenders, it's smart.
26:58Get served first, impress the ladies.
27:01Remember me? He met you this morning, RJ O'Brien.
27:04How you doing? You alone?
27:06Yeah.
27:08Won't be for long.
27:10The good ones ask for 400. Offer two, settle on three.
27:14But be careful of the real babes. They may be spoken for.
27:18If the other guy's Russian, walk away.
27:20I'm not looking.
27:21Oh, come on, everyone's looking.
27:25Here. These girls have class, okay?
27:29Galina, tell the professor what you do for a living.
27:32I love his property to Scandinavian businesses.
27:35See that? You see that girl?
27:38Masha over there. Red hair.
27:40Works for the Moscow currency exchange.
27:42Where's Alyssa? She's a radiologist.
27:44She got shot, RJ.
27:46Seriously?
27:48Whoa.
27:50Moscow may have its maxims, but it's still Dodge City.
27:54Though, I bet you're just more interested in the old days, huh?
27:58I heard you're chasing down a story.
28:00Ghosts from the past.
28:02Who told you that?
28:04Edelman.
28:05Said you were really juiced.
28:07It's a dead end.
28:09The bondman says you asked for me.
28:12Uh, you're a public.
28:15Looks like you're covered, professor. We'll talk soon.
28:17So how did you hear about me?
28:19Does it matter?
28:21400.
28:22Two.
28:23Three.
28:24Okay.
28:25Uh, my name's Foukelso. What's yours?
28:29What name do you like? What's your wife's name?
28:31I don't actually have one at the moment.
28:33Okay.
28:34Oh, okay.
28:40Uh, my name's Foukelso. What's yours?
28:43What name do you like? What's your wife's name?
28:45I don't, I actually have one at the moment.
28:49Okay, what's your hotel?
28:52Ukraine.
28:53What's it done?
28:54Look, actually, I don't want to sleep with you.
28:56Although that would be a very attractive proposition, but I...
29:00position, but I need something else from you.
29:03Whatever you want is still $300.
29:05I need to find your father, Papu.
29:10Look, just take me to where he is.
29:13Please, I'll still give you the money.
29:16Please.
29:23$400.
29:25Fine, great, thank you.
29:30Hey.
29:47You're studying law.
29:50Money.
29:51What?
29:55Money.
29:55Half now and then half later, yes.
30:01I can get another list.
30:03Can you get another ride?
30:25Block number nine, apartment 12.
30:41Fifth floor, the docket is 3131.
30:45You're not gonna come up with me?
30:48He doesn't like the way I dress.
30:51Will you wait?
30:54If you want.
30:573131.
31:24You're a bitch.
31:27You're a bitch.
31:29You're a bitch.
31:30You're a bitch.
31:31You're a bitch.
31:32You're a bitch.
31:34You're a bitch.
31:35You're a bitch.
31:36You're a bitch.
31:37You're a bitch.
31:38You're a bitch.
31:39You're a bitch.
31:40You're a bitch.
31:41You're good, you've got me.
31:43You're good.
31:44You're good.
32:05Hello?
32:11I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
32:41Let's go.
33:11Ah!
33:24Let's go!
33:25Let's go.
33:27Give it him.
33:28Oh, God.
33:30Come on.
33:31Come on!
33:33Let's go.
33:41Please, empty pockets.
33:51What?
33:51Parasync. Passport, wallet, tie.
33:54Look, I have given my statement.
33:56I am a witness. I'm not a suspect.
33:58I give you a receipt.
34:00Okay, right. I want to call the embassy.
34:02I want to know my rights.
34:04Shoelaces.
34:11I want to know my rights.
34:41I want to know my rights.
34:55Mr. Carlson.
34:56What?
34:58I'll give you a ride.
35:01Your plane leaves Sheremeteva at 1.30.
35:05And you'll be on it.
35:06You know what? This is outrageous.
35:08I report a dead body.
35:10I'm not when I'm calling the police.
35:12I didn't kill the old man.
35:13Oh, but you did.
35:15When you told Momentev you had a witness from the old times,
35:19that was his death sentence.
35:21I didn't give a name.
35:23He didn't need a name.
35:24He already knew it.
35:26I didn't.
35:27I had to dig through the old KGB files.
35:31And what did you find?
35:33I found Papu Gerasimovich Rappov.
35:3720 years after he came out of the gulags,
35:40they arrested him again.
35:41And he was questioned by the head of the Thief Directorate,
35:45Vladimir Pavlovich Momentev.
35:48You see now,
35:51he precisely knew who you were talking about.
35:54There were no other witnesses from the old times.
35:58They're all dead.
36:01So you bug Momentev's apartment?
36:04Yes.
36:05We bug Momentev's apartment.
36:08We'd like to know
36:09what he did with 500 million rubles
36:12because he found out the KGB files.
36:15Yeah, but this is murder.
36:16Why don't you bring him in?
36:18Professor,
36:20why don't you go back home,
36:21and play your games of history in your own country?
36:26What, so you can find Stalin's files and bury them?
36:28Mr. Kelso,
36:31I'm totally sick of people like you
36:35throwing masts in our faces.
36:40And I'm sick of people like Momentev
36:42trying to make gods
36:44out of monsters.
36:55I'll take you back to your hotel.
36:58I'll take you back.
37:14Listen.
37:16The old man.
37:17He didn't break in 53,
37:19or in the Gulag,
37:20or later when they hauled him in.
37:24What if he didn't break last night?
37:26So what's your point?
37:28I want to talk to his daughter.
37:31Maybe you should get to her first.
37:33Rough night, professor?
37:50I've had words.
37:51Well, when I saw you leave the juju club
37:53with that lovely Zinaid...
37:54What was that her name?
37:55I didn't catch her.
37:57Well, tell me,
37:57did you get any action
37:58before you got arrested?
38:01How the bloody hell did you know that?
38:03Professor,
38:04when a high-profile Westerner
38:06ends up in a cell,
38:07I get a call
38:08and somebody gets a backhander.
38:10Look,
38:10you made page three.
38:12Body found in bath of blood.
38:15Don't worry,
38:16you weren't mentioned.
38:17Cops give you a hard time?
38:19I was sprung.
38:20Excuse me.
38:21And they weren't cops.
38:23Not wearing a cashmere coat
38:24and handmade shoes.
38:26It's intelligence,
38:27FSB.
38:28So,
38:29did he want to know
38:30about Stalin's notebook?
38:34Edelman told me.
38:36Edelman's a prick.
38:37I'll tell you
38:38how much of a prick he is.
38:39Guy tried to rope me in.
38:40He says,
38:41I find the book,
38:41we go 50-50
38:42and leave you out of the loop.
38:43You academics.
38:46One snip of a scoop
38:47and you make the paparazzi
38:48look like a bunch of choir boys.
38:50It doesn't make any difference.
38:52I'm being deported.
38:53I'm not.
38:56Give me what you got.
38:58It's dead.
39:00Died with the old man.
39:08Oh, Gis,
39:09today custom is to open every bag.
39:12Oh, this is not good.
39:13I bought an icon.
39:18You worried, Fluke?
39:20Got the Stalin diaries
39:21tucked in your underwear?
39:26Have you told everyone?
39:28Well, in all honesty,
39:29I didn't take it too seriously.
39:33You know what, Frank.
39:36Screw you.
39:43How did you find me?
39:59I went to a hotel.
40:00They said that you've checked out.
40:03Look,
40:03I've got to get on a plane
40:06to New York.
40:07I'd love to help you,
40:08but I don't know how.
40:10I don't ask favors.
40:11I never ask favors.
40:13So why are you here?
40:14When I got home last night,
40:15there was a note from my father.
40:17It says that there is something valuable
40:19and you can tell me what it is
40:21in a toolbox.
40:22Well, come here.
40:32Mr. Kelso!
40:35Mr. Kelso!
40:37When did you last see your father?
40:38Three days ago.
40:41Before that,
40:42eight years.
40:44He came to the club,
40:46he saw my dress,
40:47and called me.
40:49I don't think he'd wait eight years
40:50just to tell you that.
40:53I don't care.
40:54I don't want him in my life.
40:55He has always been a bastard.
40:57Why would he change now?
40:58Zenaida,
41:01your father's dead.
41:08We should go.
41:38Who killed him?
41:44They think a man called Vladimir Mametov.
41:49He knew your father from the old time.
41:53What was in my life the old time?
42:08He died.
42:25I don't know.
42:27I don't know.
42:29I don't know.
42:31Oh
43:01Satsang with Mooji
43:31Mooji
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