
The streets of Glasgow, Scotland's largest city, were filled with Soviet Red Army and Soviet-flagged armored vehicles overnight, not invaded, but instead of making a Tetris movie.
The film was produced by "Kingsman" director Matthew Vaughn and directed by Joe & Ollie, director of the 2018 "Laurel and Harley" biopic Stan & Ollie. Directed by Jon S. Baird. It was launched in Scotland at the end of last year.
You may wonder why Tetris has such a Soviet set, but it's not hard to understand that Tetris was a mini-game written by Russian software engineer Alexey Pajitnov in 1984, when the world was still in the "Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union".
Taron Egerton, the film's male lead actor, can also be seen on the set, who, although he has a big beard, does not play Alexei Pakchitov, the inventor of Tetris. Egerton plays Dutch game developer Henk Rogers, who brought the game to Nintendo consoles and made it popular around the world.
Between him and Pakytenov, there is a copyright dispute over "Tetris". Directed by Joe S. Byrd hopes to make the film into a story biopic similar to the movie "The Social Network."
Tetris is not currently finalized, but it is expected to be released before the end of this year.