Aleksandr Stolper Trailers
Otklonenie - Nol TrailerThe Fourth TrailerRetribution Trailer
Total trailers found: 18
03 October 1955
A group of semitrailers is moving through a snow storm - and no one doesn't know that there is a spy between the drivers.
31 May 1957
Immediately after their wedding, a young family of archaeologists comes to Central Asia for excavations.
21 October 1948
Alexey Meresyev was a fighter pilot during the war. One day he was shot down by Nazis, and because of his wounds both of his legs had to be cut off up to his knees.
19 May 1969
The continuation of a story started by Alexander Stolper epic movie "The Alive and the Dead".
27 October 1958
A young Gipsy boy is growing up in a Russian village during the Civil War.
01 June 1931
The first Russian talking picture which won a prize at the 1st Venice IFF. The action is set in 1923.
19 December 1950
The major oil pipeline construction is going on under heavy bombings by the Nazi Air-Force. The construction workers must work under dangerous conditions around-the-clock in order to deliver oil to the Armies on the front-line.
28 August 1945
This literary adaptation was the first Soviet feature length dramatization, as opposed to documentary film, on the momentous Battle of Stalingrad.
07 August 1940
About the life of Soviet students. A group of students-graduates of a medical institute organizes a farewell party.
11 December 1972
American journalist gets a sensational material but is afraid to publish it...
31 August 1942
In the summer of 1932, Sergei Lukonin, a young man from Saratov, leaves his hometown for the distant city of Omsk to attend tank school.
22 February 1964
A Russian war correspondent is drafted into the war and finds himself in the middle of battle. When he loses his party card, however, he is treated as a deserter until he finds help from a kind man.
08 March 1943
The film is about the struggle of Czechoslovak patriots against the Nazi invaders during the years of fascist occupation.
13 November 1934
Not being able to implement his invention in his home country, engineer Arrowsmith, the author of the patent for ore flotation, goes to the USSR to work at one of the flotation plants, where he soon learns that a group of Soviet engineers is conducting similar work.