Criterion licensed a batch of Russian films from MOS at the same time. Thus we ended up with Stalker. Though its nice to get additional confirmation - and there's been plenty of times where we've only found out Criterion had something because it had a logo on TCM (like The Walls of Malapaga (1949)). These are with Criterion and should be coming out in the future (there may be more, but these are just the ones we know from Filmstruck):Feego wrote: ↑Wed Jul 25, 2018 9:36 amEisenstein's Strike aired on TCM this morning with a Janus logo (this might be old news, so if so, please forgive me). It was not a restored print, looking a notch below the Kino Blu-ray, although it did feature the original Russian intertitles. I know that Eisenstein silent box has been rumored for a hundred years. Has that completely fallen by the wayside?
BONDARCHUK, Sergei - War and Peace - 1966 - USSR
EISENSTEIN, Sergei - The Battleship Potemkin - 1925 - USSR
EISENSTEIN, Sergei - Strike - 1925 - USSR
EISENSTEIN, Sergei - The Old and the New - 1929 - USSR
KLIMOV, Elem - Welcome, or No Trespassing - 1964 - USSR
KLIMOV, Elem - Adventures of a Dentist - 1965 - USSR
KLIMOV, Elem - Come and See - 1985 - USSR
ROMM, Mikhail - Nine Days of One Year - 1962 - USSR
TARKOVSKY, Andrei - The Mirror - 1975 - USSR
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I'm still hoping that Criterion will end up with the rights to October (Ten Days that Shook the World) (1927) - but I think it may not be with MOS.