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Liya Akhedzhakova Movies

2009  
 
A classic Russian folk tale comes to the screen in this fantasy adventure for the whole family. A young princess, whose mother is the evil Baba Yaga (Liya Akhedzhakova), happens upon a magical stone; when she touches it, she's transformed into the wicked Countess of Stone (Irina Apeksimova), who must spend the rest of her days in her castle tower honing her magical skills. It is believed a master cutter could transform the magic stone into a living being capable of giving the Countess of Stone untold powers, and she searches for a man with the right abilities. Ivan (Maxin Loktionov) is an orphan with a gift for cutting stones; his talents earn him the enmity of Baba Yaga but also bring him to the attention of the Countess, who thinks he might be the man who can give her untold power. But Ivan's father ran afoul of the Countess and it cost him his life, and the youngster is more eager to avenge his father than help the Countess consolidate her power. Ivan also finds his heart is stolen by a lovely young woman Katia (Maria Andreeva), but can their love survive the fact she's the daughter of the Countess of Stone? Kniga Masterov (aka The Book of Masters) was the first Russian-language film produced by the Disney studios CIS branch, designed to cater to the growing market for international flavors in entertainment. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Liya AkhedzhakovaMaria Andreyeva, (more)
 
2007  
 
Lilacs - Russian director Pavel Lounguine's lavish and extravagant treatment of the life of Sergei Rachmaninov (1873-1943) - is so heavily fictionalized that it displays not one but two disclaimers at the outset, asserting that it bears no direct relationship to historical facts. The film stars Yevgeny Tsyganov as the chronically ill-tempered Russian composer. Lounguine cuts between episodes from two key periods in Rachmaninov's life; in one substory, he rises to celebrity in late 19th century Russia after being tutored as a prodigy under the aegis of teacher Zverev (Alexei Petrenko). The latter discourages his protégé by making an unsuccessful attempt to clamp down on the youngster's desire to compose then-unfashionable Romantic compositions. In the other, Rachmaninov - preparing to enter middle age - tours the United States during the first half of the 20th century, conducting recitals. He crumbles under the weight of his premier symphony when a drunken maestro brings it crashing to the ground, then must contend with a seemingly endless string of dysfunctional relationships, including ill-advised passions for prostitute Anna (Victoria Isakova), Communist student Mariana (Miriam Sekhon) and Natalya (Victoria Tolstoganova) - a woman he later marries. Rachmaninov then makes an unsuccessful attempt to return to Russia only to find that the rise of the Communist state (with Lenin at the helm) makes this impossible; he instead spends the remaining years of his life unsatisfactorily touring the U.S. but growing ever more grumpy, exhausted and dissatisfied with life. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

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Starring:
Yevgeny TsyganovViktoria Tolstoganova, (more)
 
2006  
 
A college student who earns his living by portraying the victims in police crime-scene reenactments discovers that something is rotten in Russia when his deceased father appears before him claiming that he was killed by his still-living wife, who is having an affair with her detestable brother-in-law, in director Kirill Serebrennikov's adaptation of a darkly comic play by the Brothers Presnyakov -- which was in turn loosely based on William Shakespeare's Hamlet. Valya (Yuri Chursin) travels to crime scenes with the ill-tempered chief detective (Vitaly Khaev) and incompetent camerawoman Lyuda (Anna Mikhalkova) in order to re-create the infractions as described by the perpetrators and eyewitness accounts. When the vengeful specter of Valya's late father appears before the aimless boy claiming that his death wasn't quite the accident that it appeared to be, the stage is soon set for the most realistic crime scene that Valya has participated in to date. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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Starring:
Yuri ChursinVitaly Khaev, (more)
 
1992  
 
In his hometown of Saratov, Bob is a pretty cool gangster and can be trusted to carry out his boss's instructions properly, so it's understandable, really, that his boss thinks of sending the leather-clad youth on a thousand-mile ride on his antique motorcycle to Moscow in order to collect a bad debt. He's never killed anyone before, but he is willing to carry out his boss' orders. The person he was sent to kill may be an old friend of his, but since Bob doesn't have a gun, the question is moot. While searching for one, he runs into a completely magical young woman named Net, who lives in a damp basement apartment which she claims was Ivan the Terrible's wine cellar. The two of them form an attachment that distracts him from his criminal obligations. To date, director Sergei Bodrov's biggest success was Prisoner of the Mountains (1996) nominated for "Best Foreign Film" Academy Award. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

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Starring:
Alexei BaranovNatalya Ginko, (more)
 
1990  
 
In this drama, a directing debut of the popular Russian actor Leonid Filatov, the actors at a Moscow repertory theater company react with ever-increasing activism to the news that their company is to be closed down by the government. One of the rep company's directors committed the cardinal sin of defecting during an international tour. At first, the members of the company simply lodge their protests with the bureaucrat who is responsible for the order of closure. When this doesn't move him, they resort to attempts to seduce him and then blackmail him. Still, he will not relent. They finally try a hunger strike. This film is based on a true story. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

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Starring:
Vladimir A. IlyinAlexander Abdulov, (more)
 
1984  
 
A disillusioned pop musician must transport a package given to him by a stranger on a train, and in the process, revisits his own mysterious past. ~ Rovi

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Starring:
Nikolai KarachentsovLiya Akhedzhakova, (more)