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  2. Bitter Harvest is a 2017 period romantic-drama film set in Soviet Ukraine in the early 1930s. The film is the first English language feature film depicting Ukraine's man-made famine, the 1932–33 Holodomor. The film stars Max Irons, Samantha Barks, Barry Pepper, Tamer Hassan, Lucy Brown and Terence Stamp.

  3. Bitter Harvest is a 1963 British kitchen sink drama film directed by Peter Graham Scott and starring Janet Munro and John Stride. [1] The film is based on The Siege of Pleasure, the 1932 second volume in the trilogy 20,000 Streets Under the Sky by Patrick Hamilton. [2]

  4. Bitter Harvest. Set in 1930s Ukraine, as Stalin advances the ambitions of communists in the Kremlin, young artist Yuri battles to save his lover Natalka from the Holodomor, the death-by-starvation program that ultimately killed millions of Ukrainians.

    • (4.2K)
    • Drama, History, Romance
    • George Mendeluk
    • 2017-02-24
  5. Bitter Harvest. Date: 1963. Director: Peter Graham Scott. Production Company: Independent Artists. Stars: Janet Munro, Terence Alexander, John Stride, Alan Badel, Thora Hird. Location (s): Buckinghamshire, Caerphilly County (Wales), London, Middlesex. Region (s): London A-B, South East A-D, Wales.

    • Where was Bitter Harvest filmed?1
    • Where was Bitter Harvest filmed?2
    • Where was Bitter Harvest filmed?3
    • Where was Bitter Harvest filmed?4
    • Where was Bitter Harvest filmed?5
  6. Sep 12, 2017 · Bitter Harvest (2017), the untold story of the Ukrainian famine genocide of the 1932-33. First English language feature film that attempts “to bring one of the most tragic pages of Ukrainian history to the big screen”.

  7. Based on one of the most overlooked tragedies of the 20th century, Bitter Harvest is a powerful story of love, honor, rebellion and survival as seen through the eyes of two young lovers caught in the ravages of Joseph Stalin’s genocidal policies against Ukraine in the 1930s.

  8. Feb 24, 2017 · If movies were rated according to the importance of their subject matter, then George Mendeluk ’s “Bitter Harvest,” which tells of the devastating famine Josef Stalin visited on the Ukraine in the 1930s, would deserve an unqualified four stars.

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