Released Date:
2000-10-20
Languages:
Russian
Countries:
Russia
Runtime:
110 min
IMDB Ratings:
7.3 (368 Reviews)
Director:
Aleksey UchitelA tragic story of love and loneliness - this is the unknown life of the great Russian writer Ivan Bunin. The confused love story that involved Bunin, his wife Vera, the young poet Galina Plotnikova, opera singer Marga Kovtun and literary man Leonid Gurov. A work of great honesty and piercing psychology.
Released Date:
2003-10-01
Languages:
Russian
Countries:
Russia
Runtime:
90 min
IMDB Ratings:
7.5 (1160 Reviews)
Director:
Aleksey UchitelWatch the exploits of three young romantics as they dance around St. Petersburg, Russia, getting themselves involved in everything from a soccer riot to a rainstorm to a fight between best friends. Set in mostly real time, Olya, Alyosha and Petya act as if the world is their due and they live to enjoy every moment of it. A film alive with energy and a twist at the end that really twists, Progulka (The Stroll) is Alexei Uchitels's latest effort. His last film, His Wife's Diary, was submitted as Russia's Oscar nomination for Best Foreign Film of 2000.
Released Date:
2005-07-07
Languages:
Russian
Countries:
Russia
Runtime:
90 min
IMDB Ratings:
6.7 (473 Reviews)
Director:
Aleksey UchitelGenres:
DramaA story of a simple, naive Russian man Konek and the people around him: his love and her sister and a mysterious man. The film is set in 1957, time of changes, time of waiting for something big to happen.
Released Date:
2008-09-11
Languages:
Russian, Chechen
Countries:
Russia, Bulgaria
Runtime:
80 min
IMDB Ratings:
6.2 (239 Reviews)
Director:
Aleksey UchitelTimofei Dekin (screenplay)
Vladimir Makanin (screenplay)
Vladimir Makanin (story)
The story of a young Chechen and his Russian captor during their civil war.
Released Date:
2010-09-23
Languages:
Russian, German
Countries:
Russia
Runtime:
124 min
IMDB Ratings:
6.5 (2187 Reviews)
Director:
Aleksey UchitelAleksandr Gonorovskiy (story)
Aleksandr Gonorovskiy
The action takes place shortly after the end of the Second World War in the Siberian hinterland, among Russians and Germans with damaged personal stories and a strange transformation: the victors seem to be crawling into the skins of the defeated, and vice versa. Ignat, is the embodiment of the larger-than-life image of the Soviet victorious warrior who, in fact, proves to be shell-shocked, sick and broken, although not completely destroyed. Trains become fetish for the heroes of the film, and speed becomes a mania; they virtually become one with their steam engines, while the machines take on human names. The heroes set up an almost fatal race in the Siberian forest, risking their own lives and those of others.
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