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Mongol was first released in Russia and Ukraine on 20 September 2007. [9] The film then premiered in cinemas in Turkey on 14 March 2008. Between April and December 2008, Mongol was released in various countries throughout the Middle East, Europe and Africa. [9] France, Algeria, Monaco, Morocco and Tunisia shared a release date of 9 April 2008.
This is a list of films by year produced in the country of Mongolia which came into existence officially in November 1936. The lists of Mongolian films are divided by period for political reasons. For an A-Z list of films see Category:Mongolian films.
In 2023, If Only I Could Hibernate was the first Mongolian film to play in Official Selection at Cannes Film Festival, at the Un Certain Regard section. It is a co-production between Zoljargal Purevdash's Mongolian production house Amygdala Films and Paris-based Urban Factory, headed by producers Frédéric Corvez and Maeva Savinien. [2] [3]
The national film studios, Mongol Kino, were founded in 1935, with Soviet technical assistance.Their first productions were a documentary on the "47th anniversary of the 1st May" and a fictional story named A Mongol son (Mongol Khüü) directed by the Russian Ilya Trauberg and Mongolian Demberel Baldan.
Mongolian film posters (9 F) Mongolian films by genre (2 C) Mongolian-language films (1 C, 22 P) Pages in category "Mongolian films" The following 2 pages are in this ...
A Pearl in the Forest (Mongolian: Мойлхон, Moilkhon, Buckthorn) is a 2008 Mongolian historical film. [1] [2]This is a story about a young couple whose newly planned life was destroyed by the impact of the Great Purge of 1934–1938 in Mongolia.
No Right to Die – Chinggis Khaan (Mongolian: Үхэж үл болно, Чингис Хаан) is a 2008 film directed by L Erdenebulgan based on the life of Temüjin, the young Genghis Khan and his unification of Mongolia, previously consisting of warring and minor kingdoms. The film is one of the largest-budgeted films produced in Mongolia.
Set in Mongolia's capital city, Ulan Bator, the film combines documentary elements with fictional elements [3] in the fragmented, impressionistic and dreamlike story of Baasar, a dog who dies early in the movie — shot by a hunter employed by the city to reduce its dog population, which has more than one dog for each four humans in its population of 800,000.