Nikolai Alekseyev

Most Popular Nikolai Alekseyev Trailers

Total trailers found: 12

Touches on the V. I. Lenin's Portrait Trailer (1967)

01 October 1967

Life and works of V.I. Lenin during the difficult period for the country of 1918.

Serafima Glyukina's Weekdays and Weekends Trailer (1988)

14 January 1988

A woman living a difficult life suddenly finds love.

War and Peace Trailer (1968)

28 April 1968

The love story of young Countess Natasha Rostova and Count Pierre Bezukhov is interwoven with the Great Patriotic War of 1812 against Napoleon's invading army.

Poem About the Ax Trailer (1968)

01 January 1968

A teleplay based on the play of the same name by N. Pogodin about the creation of a new grade of steel at a large metallurgical plant.

War and Peace, Part II: Natasha Rostova Trailer (1966)

20 July 1966

As 1809 nears its end, Natasha attends her first ball, where Andrei falls in love with her with the intent of marriage.

This Fantastic World 6 Trailer (1981)

28 December 1981

Screen adaptation of two works by science fiction writers: “Noise Level” by Raymond Jones and “Shadow of the Past” by Ivan Efremov.

Ice Goes Into the Ocean Trailer (1972)

29 October 1972

About the workdays of a team of dockers.

A Minute of History Trailer (1964)

01 January 1964

The counter-revolutionaries instructed Sergei Yaroslavtsev, the cadet, to make an attempt on the life of V.

A Man Was Born Trailer (1956)

05 November 1956

A story of a young girl going through the number of hard events in her life.

Light of a Distant Star Trailer (1965)

13 September 1965

The war separated the young heroes, but could not destroy their memory of happy times of love. A few years after the victory, the hero, having seen her picture in a magazine, goes in search of his beloved.

Torrents of Steel Trailer (1967)

05 November 1967

The victorious path of the Taman army through areas occupied by the white army in the last days of the civil war.

The Appointment Trailer (1974)

23 July 1974

The protagonists of the film are construction workers. Though they differ in character, they are united by a shared passion for discovery, purity of intention, and emotional depth.