Ya. Haron

Most Popular Ya. Haron Trailers

Total trailers found: 10

Marine Character Trailer (1970)

13 October 1970

The film is dedicated to the defenders of Odessa, the Marines who fought against the Nazi invaders.

The Slowest Train Trailer (1963)

18 September 1963

Spring, 1943. A military train is heading from a city, just liberated from the fascists. A special carriage with divisional printing-works is hitched to the train.

Petersburg Nights Trailer (1934)

19 February 1934

A loose Communist adaptation of a Dostoyevsky novel. The serf Egor Efimov, a talented violinist, dreams of true art.

The Stars of the Day Trailer (1966)

08 February 1966

A female poet and author faces the harsh realities of a besieged Leningrad. Based on Olga Berggolts' memoir of the same name.

We, The Russian People Trailer (1966)

16 January 1966

January 1917. The workers and peasants of Russia, hunted by the tsarist government in the trenches, forced to defend alien interests of the king, the landowners and exploiters-capitalists.

Chronicle of Flaming Years Trailer (1961)

23 February 1961

Once again, director Yulia Solnsteva directs a movie that her late husband Alexandre Dovchenko scripted but did not live long enough to shoot.

The Paris Commune Trailer (1936)

20 December 1936

"Paris Commune," 1870-1871. Poor working class in Paris rises up against their oppressors as France is defeated by Germany in the 1870-71 Franco-Prussian war.

An Unquiet Spring Trailer (1956)

25 August 1956

A comedy about Krushchev's 'Virgin Lands' project, to transform the barren and inhospitable spaces of the vast Soviet Union into fertile agricultural plains.

Pages of Life Trailer (1948)

01 April 1948

The story of a young woman who, after her years at university in the city, returns to her hometown an engineer and begins work on a huge new power plant.

Generation of Victors Trailer (1936)

05 November 1936

The film covers the events of 1896-1905 - from the first revolutionary gatherings to the armed Moscow uprising of workers at Krasnaya Presnya, later called Bloody Sunday.