Most Popular Yekaterina Kmit Trailers
Total trailers found: 12
Hunting for a Pimp Trailer (1991)
07 April 1991
Двое приятелей Вова и Боб ограбили квартиру Нины - любовницы директора рынка.
Executor of the Sentence Trailer (1992)
06 June 1992
В основу сюжета фильма положены реальные события. Бывший "афганец" Юрий Кирсанов жил без особых проблем: отдельная квартира, любимая и любящая жена, замечательный сын.
Squad "D" Trailer (1993)
17 July 1993
Dangerous and attractive adventures at sea and on land: passionate love, a meeting with death, the exoticism of the Far East and a desperate fight against drug dealers.
Rats Corner Trailer (1992)
01 January 1992
Klim, illegally convicted of karate training, returns home after five years in prison. Finds shelter with a caring uncle Pasha.
Gongofer Trailer (1992)
01 January 1992
Cossacks Kol'ka and Zarubin travel to Moscow to buy an ox. Their trip turns chaotic when a local witch seduces Kol'ka and replaces his brown eyes with blue ones.
Kuka Trailer (2007)
29 November 2007
A woman and a young girl in different cities are struggling to find their way in this world. Will their paths intersect and will that change their destinies?
Rendez-vous House Trailer (1991)
02 April 1991
A few women, wives of a big communist bosses are blackmailed into prostitution but no one is trying to escape this business.
To the Last Limit Trailer (1991)
09 July 1991
An ex-convict Viktor Dremov, who is also an ex-boxer, tries to mend his ways and start a new life but his former girlfriend is marrying another man (some old antiquarian), while local thugs rob him of his car and press him constantly trying to make him work for them.
4:0 Tanechka Ahead Trailer (1982)
06 June 1982
A new young teacher Tatyana Ivanovna takes a problematic 5th"B" class and wins with the score 4:0.
Little People of the Bolshevik Lane, or I Want Beer Trailer (1993)
14 April 1993
Comedy with elements of the absurd about the absurdity of life, unfulfilled dreams and the mysteries of the Russian soul.
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.