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B. Back in the USSR (film) Balloon (2018 film) The Bamboo Saucer; Barbara (2012 film) Barcelona (film) Batman: The Dark Knight Returns (film) The Beast of Yucca Flats
Geschwader Fledermaus (Bat Squadron) (1957); Cerný prapor (The Black Battalion/Das schwarze Bataillon/Bataillon des Teufels) (1958); Kommando 52 (Commando 52) (1965); Der lachende Mann – Bekenntnisse eines Mörders (The Laughing Man – Confessions of a Killer) (1966)
A River Runs Through It (1992) – drama film following two sons of a Presbyterian minister, one studious and the other rebellious, as they grow up and come of age in the Rocky Mountain region during a span of time from roughly World War I to the early days of the Great Depression, including part of the Prohibition era, based on the 1976 semi ...
Envisioning Socialism: Television and the Cold War in the German Democratic Republic (2014) excerpt and text search; Hammond, Andrew (2013). British Fiction and the Cold War. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 86. ISBN 9781137274854. Hendershot, Cynthia (2001). I was a Cold War Monster: Horror Films, Eroticism, and the Cold War Imagination. Popular Press.
The films included here are set in the time period from 1945 to 2001, or from the start of the Cold War until it came to an end in 1990s. The Cold War itself was the aftermath of World War II. At the turn of the new century the world woke up to a new reality one September morning and Cold War's aftermath period came to an end.
Ahead, Harper’s Bazaar editors shared their favorite formative films from the ’90s, including tearjerkers like Titanic and camp classics like But I’m a Cheerleader—all guaranteed to bring ...
This is a timeline of the main events of the Cold War, a state of political and military tension after World War II between powers in the Western Bloc (the United States, its NATO allies and others) and powers in the Eastern Bloc (the Soviet Union, its allies in the Warsaw Pact and later the People's Republic of China).
The preoccupation of Cold War themes in popular culture continued during the 1960s and 1970s. One of the better-known films of the period was the 1964 black comedy Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb directed by Stanley Kubrick and starring Peter Sellers .