Veronika Buzhinskaya Trailers
The Russian Forest TrailerWalking the Streets of Moscow TrailerAn Optimistic Tragedy Trailer
The Russian Forest TrailerWalking the Streets of Moscow TrailerAn Optimistic Tragedy Trailer
Total trailers found: 13
06 September 1957
Two young people from the country arrive to Leningrad hoping to get into university. She succeeds, and he fails but stays in the city to try again in the next year.
11 April 1964
On a stopover in Moscow, a young writer Volodya makes friends with Kolya, who is returning home from a hard night shift.
12 June 1963
1918 year. A woman commissar has been appointed from the Central Committee of the Bolshevik Party to the Russian warship Gromoboi, which is ruled by anarchist sailors.
08 February 1927
The film recreates episodes from the December Uprising of 1825. Against the backdrop of the uprising, a love story unfolds between the Decembrist Annenkov and Polina Gebl.
28 April 1927
Komsomol girl Katya Karnakova, a darling of the small provincial town Old Lopsha, is seriously smitten with a fellow Komsomol and does not even try to hide this from others.
09 November 1964
Based on the novel of the same name by Leonid Leonov. Young Polya comes to Moscow: she wants to find her father, Professor Vikhrov, and try to understand why her mother broke up with him.
01 September 1922
On the powerless position of peasant women in pre-revolutionary Russia. Marisha, a village girl, is in love with the coachman Yakov.
24 December 1926
A young country girl who becomes an apple seller is seduced and abandoned. She finds a protector but when he is arrested for theft she finds honest work in a factory.
01 January 1929
The chairman of the factory committee of one of the Leningrad factories, Fyodor Gorbachev, a weak-willed man who was unable to completely overcome his petty-proprietor psychology, is visited from the village by his brother Sergei, a former kulak and trader.
10 September 1926
About the participation of the exiled Russian revolutionary in the struggle of the Sami against the arbitrariness of the tsarist police and predatory merchants.