Furthermore, the physical media release (DVD/Blu-ray) was limited to a small print run in Belgium and France. Today, those copies are out of print and sell for exorbitant prices on eBay.
Over the last decade, OK.ru evolved into an accidental video-on-demand archive. The platform allows users to upload long-form video content. Due to lax content ID enforcement compared to YouTube, and a different legal interpretation of copyright (often relying on "fair use" or "cultural preservation" clauses in Russian law), OK.ru hosts thousands of rare, out-of-print, and "lost" films. puppylove 2013 ok.ru
Thus, the digital rights are in a state of legal limbo. The production company dissolved, and the rights are split between various entities that have no interest in re-releasing a controversial art-house film. When a movie falls into this "rights hell," it vanishes from legal digital storefronts. This is where OK.ru enters the narrative. Originally launched in 2006 as a social network for classmates (the name literally means "Classmates"), OK.ru is one of Russia's most enduring web platforms. While younger Russian audiences migrated to VK (Vkontakte) and Instagram, OK.ru retained a massive user base in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet republics. The platform allows users to upload long-form video content
Just be prepared: it will haunt you for days. And that is precisely why it is worth preserving. Have you watched "Puppylove" (2013) on OK.ru? What did you think of the ending? Let us know in the comments below (or in the OK.ru video comment section). The production company dissolved, and the rights are