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  1. One of the last Soviet movies, Alexander Mitta’s Lost in Siberia, hit the world screens exactly 30 years ago.For viewers in the West, who until then had known about Gulag camps only from books ...

    • Boris Egorov
  2. Lost in Siberia. Lost in Siberia is a 1991 Soviet-British film by Alexander Mitta. It was shot entirely in Russia, either on location or at Mosfilm Studio. The post-production was started at Mosfilm Studio and completed in London. The film was selected as the British entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 64th Academy Awards, but was ...

  3. Alexander Mitta/Mosfilm, 1991 A British archaeologist who is working at a dig in northern Iran is mistaken for an American spy by the Soviet secret services. He is abducted and taken to Moscow and ...

  4. Aleksandr Mitta. Director: Raskalyonnaya subbota. Russian film director and screenwriter Alexander Mitta was born 28 March 1933 in Moscow. Alexander Mitta's career as film director and screenwriter spans from the 1960s until the 2010s. He studied engineering in 1955, then worked as a cartoonist in art and magazines. In 1960 Mitta graduated at the film directing faculty of the VGIK. Striving to ...

  5. Alexander Naumovich Mitta (‹See Tfd› Russian: Алекса́ндр Нау́мович Митта́; born 28 March 1933 in Moscow) is a Soviet and Russian film director, screenwriter and actor. [1] Alexander Mitta in 2017. Mitta's birth name was Alexander Naumovich Rabinovich (‹See Tfd› Russian: Рабино́вич). He studied ...

  6. Aleksandr Mitta. Director: Raskalyonnaya subbota. Russian film director and screenwriter Alexander Mitta was born 28 March 1933 in Moscow. Alexander Mitta's career as film director and screenwriter spans from the 1960s until the 2010s. He studied engineering in 1955, then worked as a cartoonist in art and magazines.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Air_Crew_(film)Air Crew - Wikipedia

    144 minutes. Country. Soviet Union. Language. Russian. Air Crew (Russian: Экипаж, romanized: Ekipazh, lit. 'crew') is a 1980 disaster film directed by Alexander Mitta. Inspired by the Airport movie series, it was the first disaster film shot in the Soviet Union. [1][2]