Viktor Novoselskiy

Most Popular Viktor Novoselskiy Trailers

Total trailers found: 11

So We Will Win! Trailer (1987)

31 October 1987

Based on the play of the same name by M. Shatrov.

Dead Souls Trailer (1979)

07 February 1979

A satirical comedy based on the poem of the same name by N.V. Gogol.

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.

Two on the Steppes Trailer (1962)

05 July 1962

In the summer of 1942, the Soviet army is fighting the Germans on the Don River. Young lieutenant Ogarkov gets lost in the steppe and fails to deliver a redeployment order.

This Fantastic World 5 Trailer (1981)

21 June 1981

In this series of the popular television almanac, the works “On Eternal Wanderings and About the Earth” by Ray Bradbury and “The Choice” by Kir Bulychev were filmed.

Carnival Night Trailer (1956)

29 December 1956

It is the New Year's Eve and the employees of an Economics Institute are ready with their annual New Year's entertainment program.

The Kremlin Chimes Trailer (1967)

01 January 1967

Performance of the Gorky Moscow Art Theater based on the play by N. Pogodin.

The First Echelon Trailer (1955)

31 December 1955

In one of the steppe regions of Kazakhstan arrives on Komsomol youth squad. Severe frosts, spring mud flows, exhausting work than their specialty - the development of virgin land does not come easy.

Street Is Full of Surprises Trailer (1958)

21 January 1958

Chief accountant Porfiry Petrovich Smirnov-Alyansky, who took a good walk on the anniversary of his colleague cashier Ivan Zakharovich Vodnev, climbs into the traffic controller's booth and disrupts traffic on one of the streets of Leningrad.

A Groom from the Right Society Trailer (1958)

22 September 1958

Semyon Danilovich Petukhov was very surprised to found upon returning from vacation that he was declared dead and.

The Prince and the Pauper Trailer (1985)

17 November 1985

A play by Sergei Mikhalkov based on the story by Mark Twain, staged by the Moscow Art Academic Theatre named after M.