: This doesn't directly correspond to a commonly known term in the wine world. It could be a misspelling or a term specific to a region or producer not widely recognized.

"Beaupère 1981 Okru Extra Quality" refers to the 1981 French drama film Beau-père (directed by Bertrand Blier), which is often shared on the OK.RU social platform in high-definition formats. The term likely confuses the film's title with "Extra Quality" spirit descriptions, as vintage 1981 cognac and wine often hold that label. For access to the film, explore the collection on OK.RU ok.ru/video/11227211303526.

: A French comedy-drama directed by Bertrand Blier, starring Patrick Dewaere. It follows a man who develops a complex relationship with his teenage stepdaughter after her mother's death. : Refers to

Critics at the time, notably in SubStance and Diacritics , accused Beaupré of creating an unverifiable object of study. “OKRU” was a fiction, they argued; therefore, any conclusions drawn were merely elaborate thought experiments. Yet this accusation misses the point. Beaupré was not an ethnographer of the Eastern Bloc, but a cartographer of a future logic. The “extra quality” he described—the feature that signals prestige precisely because it is unnecessary—would become the dominant logic of the post-1990s “premium” economy. Organic avocados, titanium iPhones, and artisanal ice cubes are all, in Beaupré’s terms, OKRU artifacts. They contain a manufactured excess that serves no purpose other than to testify to the system’s ability to produce beyond need.

: Critics at Wikipedia have long praised the chemistry between Dewaere and Besse. Dewaere’s performance earned him a César Award nomination for Best Actor, capturing a man lost in a fog of sorrow.