Viktor Shcherbakov

Most Popular Viktor Shcherbakov Trailers

Total trailers found: 10

My Darling Star Trailer (2000)

11 December 2000

When the war, going somewhere far away, becomes ordinary, you begin to notice it only when it comes to the house, killing and mutilating the young and the best.

At Home Among Strangers, a Stranger Among His Own Trailer (1974)

11 November 1974

Following the Russian Civil War, a loyal Red, Shilov, must prove he is at home among strangers as he attempts to recapture a shipment of gold that he was supposed to deliver to Moscow.

Crimson Shores Trailer (1979)

01 January 1979

Soviet propaganda film. After the end of the WWII, a group of bridge builders comes to the village of Lyubotin, but around them, disturbing the peaceful life, the “Banderites“ are rampaging around.

I'm Coming Back Trailer (1982)

10 July 1982

The film is about a young Georgian poet Mirza Gelovani, who died in WWII. It also tells the story ofd

Until The Last Minute Trailer (1974)

04 March 1974

The prototype of the hero of the film - Soviet Ukrainian writer Yaroslav Galan, who devoted the last years of his life to exposing the Greek Catholic Church and the Ukrainian nationalists.

Aurora Trailer (2006)

30 November 2006

Aurora dreams about becoming a talented ballet dancer one day. However, life is not so simple. 12-year-old orphan Aurora Nedelina lives in an orphanage in Pripyat and accidentally becomes a witness to the explosion at the Chernobyl APP.

The Secrets of St. Yuri Trailer (1982)

06 December 1982

The film is based on real historical facts of the First World War. The action takes place in Galicia.

The Birthday Party Trailer (1977)

11 February 1977

This lyrical psychological film is about true friendship. The characters in the film are contemporaries in of late 1970s Azerbaijan SSR with differing visions of the world, yet sharing true and lasting friendship.

Icon Trailer (2012)

01 January 2012

Fig to Kokui! Trailer (1993)

19 September 1993

Russians once called Kokui a settlement inhabited by foreigners. It was believed that the customs prevailing in such settlements had nothing to do with Russian national customs.