The narration by Max Eastman (1883-1969), the pioneer American radical, conveys with emotion and humanity the drama and pathos of the revolution. At first hailed by film critics as a masterpiece, Tsar to Lenin aroused fierce opposition from those who feared the consequences of its truthful portrayal of events. First, the Stalinist organizations—which could not abide the documentary’s depiction of the leading role played by Leon Trotsky in the revolution and civil war—threatened a boycott of theaters that showed the film. Later, during the McCarthyite era and the Cold War, public showings of Tsar to Lenin were all but impossible. Eighty years after its premier, the importance of Tsar to Lenin remains undiminished. In this Centenary Anniversary Year of the Russian Revolution, the problems of one hundred years ago - war, social inequality, political repression - are the burning questions of our day. The film footage answers the lies told today about the Russian Revolution. In a new period of global capitalist crisis, Tsar to Lenin bears witness to a moment in history when socialist ideals inspired the greatest revolutionary movement in world history.