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Films shot in Moscow

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The Bourne Supremacy
2004 film directed by Paul Greengrass
Stalker
1979 film by Andrei Tarkovsky
Solaris
1972 film directed by Andrei Tarkovsky
Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears
1980 film by Vladimir Menshov
Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol
2011 film directed by Brad Bird
The Diamond Arm
1968 film by Leonid Gaidai
Andrei Rublev
1966 film by Andrei Tarkovsky
Blade
1998 film directed by Stephen Norrington
Ivan Vasilievich: Back to the Future
1973 film by Leonid Gaidai
War and Peace
1965-67 Soviet film by Sergei Bondarchuk
Air Force One
1997 film directed by Wolfgang Petersen
The Irony of Fate
1976 television film directed by Eldar Ryazanov
Man with a Movie Camera
1929 Soviet silent documentary film
The Cranes Are Flying
1957 film by Mikhail Kalatozov
K-19: The Widowmaker
2002 film by Kathryn Bigelow
Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit
2014 film directed by Kenneth Branagh
Resident Evil: Retribution
2012 film directed by Paul W. S. Anderson
Red Heat
1988 film by Walter Hill
The Death of Stalin
2017 film directed by Armando Iannucci
Operation Y and Other Shurik's Adventures
1965 Soviet film by Leonid Gaidai
The 9th Company
2005 film directed by Fyodor Bondarchuk
The Sum of All Fears
2002 film by Phil Alden Robinson
Strike
1924 film by Sergei Eisenstein
Office Romance
1977 film by Eldar Ryazanov
Loveless
2017 film by Andrey Zvyagintsev
Gentlemen of Fortune
1971 Soviet comedy film directed by Aleksandr Seryj
Kin-dza-dza!
Kin-dza-dza! (, ) is a 1986 Soviet film released by the Mosfilm studio and directed by Georgiy Daneliya, with a story by Georgiy Daneliya and Revaz Gabriadze. It is a dystopian science-fiction comedy, in which two men from the Soviet Union accidentally travel through space, meeting two aliens from the Kin-dza-dza star system and their post-apocalyptic world.
Aelita
1924 film by Yakov Protazanov
Mimino
Mimino (, , ) is a 1977 comedy-drama film by Soviet director Georgiy Daneliya produced by Mosfilm and Gruziya-film, starring Vakhtang Kikabidze and Frunzik Mkrtchyan. Anatoliy Petritskiy served as the film's Director of Photography. The Soviet era comedy won the 1977 Golden Prize at the 10th Moscow International Film Festival.
The Darkest Hour
2011 film directed by Chris Gorak
Night Watch
2004 film by Timur Bekmambetov
The Saint
1997 film directed by Phillip Noyce
The Barber of Siberia
1998 film by Nikita Mikhalkov
Brother 2
2000 film by Aleksei Balabanov
Police Academy: Mission to Moscow
1994 film directed by Alan Metter
Volga-Volga
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Walking the Streets of Moscow
1964 film by Georgiy Daneliya
First Strike
1996 film by Stanley Tong
Attraction
2017 Russian science-fiction film by Fyodor Bondarchuk
The Russia House
1990 film directed by Fred Schepisi
Mio in the Land of Faraway
1987 film directed by Vladimir Grammatikov
Pathaan
2023 Indian film by Siddharth Anand
The Last Station
2009 film by Michael Hoffman
The Twelve Chairs
1971 Soviet comedy film by Leonid Gaidai
Unbelievable Adventures of Italians in Russia
1974 Soviet-Italian film by Eldar Ryazanov and Francesco Prosperi
The Challenge
2023 film directed by Klim Shipenko
Beware of the Car
1966 film by Eldar Ryazanov
The Red Tent
1969 film by Mikhail Kalatozov
The Blue Bird
1976 film by George Cukor
Day Watch
2006 film by Timur Bekmambetov
First Time
2017 space history film by Dmitriy Kiselev
Legenda No. 17
2013 Russian film by Nikolai Lebedev
Station for Two
1983 film by Eldar Ryazanov
Panfilov's 28 Men
2016 Russian World War II film by Andrey Shalopa and Kim Druzhinin
Jolly Fellows
1934 Soviet comedy film by Grigori Aleksandrov
The Balkan Line
2019 film directed by Andrei Volgin
Moscow Strikes Back
1942 war propaganda film by Ilya Kopalin and Leonid Varlamov
Flight Crew
2016 film directed by Nikolai Lebedev
The Star
2002 film by Nikolai Lebedev
Grandads-Robbers
Old Robbers (, lit. "elderly bandits") is a 1972 Soviet crime comedy-drama by Eldar Ryazanov, filmed on Mosfilm. The movie title resembles the name of a Russian children's traditional yard game Cossacks-Robbers ().