Is there a name for the kind of story where some Jack the Ripper knockoff serial killer commits ritualistic murders in a mid- to late 19th century setting, and a police detective with A Haunted Past and much manpain has to stop them? Because there's kind of a lot of those.
Anyway, this is one of them, with very little to distinguish it, but reasonably well made. Forgettable, but watchable.
rest in peace king in a different geopolitical climate you couldve been tumblr's it girl but then in a different geopolitical climate these movies would never exist
Rus aktör Sergei Sergeyevich Bodrov (Rusça: Сергей Сергеевич Бодров) 27 Aralık 1971 tarihinde Moskova’da dünyaya geldi.
Aynı zamanda Sergei Bodrov Jr. olarak da bilinmektedir.
Brother, Prisoner of the Mountains, East/West ve Brother 2 filmlerinde başrol oynayan bir Rus aktördü.
Rus oyun yazarı, oyuncu, yönetmen ve yapımcı Sergei Bodrov’un oğluydu.
The Messenger filminin çekimlerinin ikinci…
Brother 2 https://bit.ly/3GsyWDy The gang’s all back together for the sequel to Brother – Brother 2, unsurprisingly. That includes the writer/director Aleksey Balabanov, star Sergey Bodrov, key members of the support cast, notably Viktor Sukhorukov as the titular brother, plus cinematographer Sergey Astakhov, editor Marina Lipartiya, composer Vyacheslav Butusov and even the chunky knit sweater that Bodrov wore … Read more
Zorikto Dorzhiev, Russian Buryat Born 1976 (Ulan-Ude)
Zorikto has emerged as one of Russia's most acclaimed artists, and a beacon for young artists in Buryatia. After studying at the Buryat Republican College of Arts in Ulan-Ude, Zorikto trained with Professor A.M. Znak at the Krasnoyarsk State Institute of Arts from 1996-2002 and then, until 2005, with branches of the Russian Academy of Arts in the Urals, Siberia and Russia's Far East. His work has been exhibited in leading institutions such as the Council of Europe and at the Beijing Olympics, while his recent series Steppe Story ran for two months at St Petersburg's elite State Russian Museum in autumn 2009. Nomadic Buryat life is the main subject of his work which, along with precise draughtsmanship and gift for colour, displays subtle humour and a taste for caricature.
To Zorikto, “a nomad does not travel around in search of a better life. He is rather an artist, a poet, a philosopher, and often a loner.”
His Oriental aesthetic involves refined, elongated silhouettes, with his subjects ranging from sensuous females - his iconic Mona Lisa Khatun has been dubbed the "Madonna of the Steppes" - to warriors on horseback evoking Buryats' Mongol ancestors. He worked as a set-designer for Sergei Bodrov's blockbuster movie Mongol, has illustrated Vladimir Baraeyev's novel The Herald of Genghis Khan (published by Khankhalaev), and also designs traditional-style Buryat head-dresses.