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Allow me to recommend the Soviet production of Sherlock Holmes on YouTube. As an index of its vibe, this is how it depicts a man who has just arrived from Canada.

@vruba Seems fairly accurate WRT expectations, TBS.

@vruba the idea that RUSSIA would be like "Canada that's the cold place right" like they don't have siberia

@vruba That would be EASTERN Canada. If he was from BC he'd have a fistful of daffodils.

@vruba In fairness, that is what us Canadian men look like.

@vruba where has he arrived? Because if he has come to a location where it is above 10° C surely he would be going about in short sleeves and quite possibly shorts.

@vruba
a few explanations from RU for the uninitiated:
1. the photo shows Nikita Mikhalkov, an Oscar winner and the son of the author of the Russian national anthem
2. Sherlock Holmes in the Soviet version was awarded the Order of the British Empire by the Queen
3. Jules Verne, Dumas, Conan Doyle and Agatha Christie were very popular in the USSR

@liilliil @vruba
wasn't there also a soviet adaption of winnie the pooh that was also very popular?

@floppyplopper
Unfortunately, very few people in the USSR knew the original Winnie-the-Pooh. We had Boris Zakhoder's adaptation, and the cartoons based on it.

@vruba

@vruba I'm Canadian and that is how I dress all the time

@Tim_Eagon @marimo The ones I’ve watched so far seem to understand the genre fiction spirit of the originals better than most adaptations do, and have some very enjoyable touches. If I wanted to pick them apart, I could, but I don’t want to.

@vruba

You're right, that "Canadian" outdoor gear is all wrong. He should also be wearing a fur hat with earflaps.

#Canadian #winter

@vruba

Ridiculous.

They forgot to give him a canoe, and a bottle pf maple syrup.

@vruba That mirrors depictions of Russia in US movies where there's always snow.

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