The Future Is Here
We may earn a commission from links on this page

How Russians Imagined the Year 2017 In 1960

We may earn a commission from links on this page.

How did the people of the Soviet Union expect to live in the year 2017? A filmstrip from 1960 shows that their expectations were pretty similar to the futuristic predictions of Americans. With a touch more Communism, of course.

Matt Baillie from the Facebook group Soviet Visuals sent me a tip about the retro-futuristic filmstrip, which would have been played through a Diafilm in the 1960s—a kind of home slide projector that was incredibly popular in the Soviet Union.

Advertisement

The illustrations were created by L. Smekhov and written by V. Strukova and V. Shevchenko. And it’s incredible how closely they mirror what was going on in the United States as far as technological dreams were concerned.

I’ve included select images from what appears to be the original source (Sergey Pozdnyakov) below, along with some of the translations from the Moscow Times, which our own Russian-speaking editor confirmed are accurate.

Someone also did a video version if you’d like to watch it that way. It has jazzy music and star wipes if that’s your thing. Otherwise, some of the stills are below.

Advertisement
Advertisement

The first panel reads “In the Year 2017", naturally.

One of the panels shows students of the year 2017 using a “special cinema device” which allows them to look back at how the Soviet Union was created and evolved. Interestingly, the illustration looks like it was almost certainly inspired by the Futurama exhibit from the 1939 New York World’s Fair.

Advertisement

Visitors to the fair could look at the futuristic cities of tomorrow in the Futurama ride, not unlike the Soviet kids above.

Advertisement

Much like the dreams that were sold in the United States at midcentury, everything in the future Soviet Union would be atomic powered! Including the trains!

From the Moscow Times:

The children hear the voice of the narrator: “And here is the dam across the Bering Strait. Do you see what’s whizzing over it? Atomic-powered trains. The dam blocked the cold water currents from the Arctic Ocean and the climate in the Far East improved.

Advertisement

The drilling of the future will be advanced as well. “And then, the earth surface kind of melted away, and you could see what was happening in the bowels of the earth. In the depths of volcanos, underground boat-moles made out of special heat-resistant steel were ripping mines towards eternal sources of energy.”

Advertisement

And there’s amazing space travel, of course.

From the Moscow Times:

Then in the film, the Earth itself disappears. In outer space, almost at the speed of light, photon interstellar rocketships set off for the nearest and faraway planetary system, Alpha Centauri.

Advertisement

The pictures of space travel are decidedly Soviet, but Americans will perhaps recognize a hint of Chesley Bonestell from the mid-1950s.

Advertisement

We meet a young boy named Igor in the strip, whose father works in weather control. Weather control, of course, was something that both the United States and the Soviet Union obsessed over during the Cold War as a potential weapon.

Above we see Igor inserting an “instruction note” into the computerized kitchen, which makes his breakfast. After the machine reads the instructions, “automatic scoopers measure out what’s needed, and special knives quickly chop vegetables.”

Advertisement

If this all looks similar to the Jetsons, that’s because it is. And this was produced a full two years before the Jetsons would air on American TV.

Advertisement

Did the Jetsons of 1962 rip off this Soviet filmstrip? Probably not. It’s yet another reminder that the Jetsons was a parody show, taking its ideas from 1950s futurism and heightening the absurdity. This computerized kitchen was likely inspired by the other visualizations of futuristic food that would come out in the 1950s. Perhaps they were even inspired by the futuristic fair put on in Moscow in 1959— organized by the Americans who were much more obsessed with the future of food than the Soviets were during this period.

Advertisement

Igor’s home has a videophone, as one might expect. You can see it as a standalone appliance on the left as Igor rushes to talk with his mother. Much like the Jetsons, distance isn’t a hindrance to communication for this version of 2017.

Advertisement

Igor’s mother happens to be on a “floating kindergarten” of the future on the Black Sea.

Advertisement

From the Moscow Times:

“Are you … in the Black Sea?” Igor asks, surprised. “I’m here for work,” she says. “I’m inspecting the Black Sea’s floating kindergartens, and I also dropped in on ours. Call Dad and tell him I won’t be home until tomorrow.”

Advertisement

And what happens when you’re in the harsh winter elements, like the scene you see above?

Advertisement

You go underground...

Advertisement

...where an incredible utopia of perfect weather awaits.

Advertisement

These underground cities produce plenty, though. This one, known as Uglegrad is showing a visiting group of students how much they produce.

Advertisement

But it’s not all hard work. “An eternal spring reins,” as the guide boasts of what they have built underground in the futuristic year 2017.

Advertisement

And much like the impressive drills illustrated in the United States by the likes of Arthur Radebaugh and Walt Disney (through the direction of Ward Kimball in 1958's “Magic Highway, USA”) the Soviets had their own version.

Advertisement

Igor’s father works with weather control stations like the one we see above.

Advertisement

But there’s trouble in paradise. The dirty imperialists (read: Americans) are messing with weapons that they shouldn’t have.

From the Moscow Times:

Meanwhile, back at the Central Institute for Weather Control, where Igor’s father works, there’s dire news. “We’ve just been informed,” the head meteorologist says, “that the last remaining imperialists, hiding on a remote island, have tested a banned meson weapon. During the test, there was an explosion of unprecedented strength, which destroyed the entire island and simultaneously created atmospheric disturbances around the planet.”

Advertisement

What will Igor’s father do? The dirty rotten imperialists have caused a storm with their damned weapons tests in the South Pacific.

Advertisement

The weather station needs to be dispatched to save as many people as possible.

From the Moscow Times:

On the television screen in the station, an image of the Black Sea coast flashes. A gigantic tornado rips off the roofs on homes, tearing apart a century-old village.

Advertisement

The brave men of the weather station have saved the day.

Advertisement

When the weather station returns to Moscow, the men are hailed as heroes, having used their weather control powers to save hundreds of lives.

Advertisement

Igor and his father embrace, as everyone in Moscow breathes a great sigh of relief and women throw flowers at the brave Soviet heroes.

Advertisement

And the family is reunited, if only over videophone for the moment. The imperialist weapon’s terrible weather effects have been contained in the glorious year 2017, but the last vestiges of their capitalist movement probably haven’t been completely wiped out. We assume that vigilance will remain necessary.

[Moscow Times]