Few people who have seen Battleship Potemkin remember that it is in black and white ("But I could see the blood on the steps") or silent ("The shouting crowd, the gunshots"). This is testament to the film's power. Made in 1925 to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the 1905 revolution, this film is, on the face of it, a standard propaganda film. So motivating, it was used on a Soviet ship to motivate an anti-establishment mutiny in the dying days of the Soviet Union. However, like so much of Eisenstein's work it is multi-layered. Yes, the sailors are victorious, but the citizens of Odessa are massacred and we know that the revolution ultimately failed. There is an overwhelming feeling of sadness and futility as we watch the ship sail off victorious into the sunset - Stalin disapproved of it for this reason. Overall, a film everyone should see, not just because it's so much an icon of the Communist era in the Soviet Union, but because it's so well-done, so gripping, so expressive and so memorable in its own right.