In this distinctly Russian romantic comedy, step-siblings Kolya and Olga have been in love since childhood. Soon after...
|
|
1995
|
The trials of a Russian who immigrates to Israel are explored in this Israeli drama. Valery Ostrovsky, an award-winning,...
|
|
1994
|
|
|
1994
|
|
|
1993
|
|
|
1993
|
Anya was in love with her older sister's boyfriend Timoshin long before she emigrated from the then U.S.S.R. for America....
|
|
1993
|
|
|
1992
|
Andrei Konchalovsky's examination of totalitarianism, and the self-deluded mind-set that allows it to happen, is based on...
|
Stalin
|
1991
|
|
|
1989
|
In the heady days just prior to the collapse of the Soviet system in Russia, a satirical, anarchistic comedy such as this was...
|
|
1989
|
|
|
1988
|
The original title of the German-Russian coproduction To Kill a Dragon was Ubit Drakona. The "dragons" slain during the...
|
|
1988
|
|
|
1988
|
|
|
1988
|
A loveless young Russian woman decides to find a boy friend by posting handbills containing the title information plus home...
|
Valentin
|
1987
|
The setting for this off-beat drama of love and jealousy is the Pushkin Poetry Festival in Boldino. Liosha (Oleg Yankovsky)...
|
Mitia
|
1986
|
|
|
1986
|
|
|
1985
|
|
|
1984
|
|
|
1984
|
|
|
1983
|
|
|
1983
|
|
|
1983
|
|
|
1983
|
An imaginative 13-year-old teenager maintains that the great Russian writer Alexander Pushkin was her direct ancestor,...
|
|
1982
|
|
|
1981
|
|
|
1981
|
|
|
1980
|
|
|
1980
|
|
|
1976
|
|
|
1976
|
|
|
1975
|
|
|
1975
|
|
|
1974
|
|
|
1972
|
|
|
1971
|
|
|
1971
|
|
|
1970
|