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Russian films 1992– ... Films are listed by year of release in alphabetical order on separate pages. 1917–1929. List of Soviet films of 1917–1921;
Soviet movies online at Russian Film Hub; Russian Newsreels and Documentary Films Archive; Russian Film Database, University of Innsbruck, Austria (in German and Germanically transliterated Cyrillic. Eisenstein, a German name to begin with, goes through the wringer and comes back out as "Ejzenstejn", e.g.)
1980s Soviet films (347 P) This page was last edited on 13 August 2024, at 22:24 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...
This is the list of highest-grossing films in the Soviet Union, in terms of box office admissions (ticket sales). It includes the highest-grossing films in the Soviet Union (USSR), the highest-grossing domestic Soviet films, [1] the domestic films with the greatest number of ticket sales by year, [2] and the highest-grossing foreign films in the Soviet Union. [3]
Man with a Movie Camera; Man Without a Name (1932 film) Maria. Save Moscow; Mimino; Missile X – Geheimauftrag Neutronenbombe; Mister Knockout; Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears; The Most Charming and Attractive; My God, Ilya!
Osvobozhdenie, German: Befreiung, Polish: Wyzwolenie) is a film series released in 1970 and 1971, directed by Yuri Ozerov and shot in wide-format NIKFI process (70 mm). The script was written by Yuri Bondarev and Oscar Kurganov. The series was a Soviet-Polish-East German-Italian-Yugoslav co-production.
The 9th Company (Russian: 9 рота, romanized: 9 rota) is a 2005 Russian war film directed by Fyodor Bondarchuk and set during the Soviet–Afghan War.The film is loosely based on a real-life battle that took place at Hill 3234 in early 1988, during Operation Magistral, the last large-scale Soviet military operation in Afghanistan.
The Battle of Moscow (Russian: Битва за Москву, Bitva za Moskvu) is a 1985 Soviet two-part war film, presenting a dramatized account of the Battle of Moscow during the Second World War, and the events preceding it. The two films were a Soviet–East German–Czechoslovak–Vietnamese co-production, directed and written by Yuri ...