Skip to content
Category

Soviet-era Ukrainian films

page 1
Earth
1930 film by Alexander Dovzhenko, Yuliya Solntseva
Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors
1965 film by Sergei Parajanov
Zvenigora
thumb | Zvenigora (1928) by Alexander Dovzhenko Zvenigora () is a 1928 Soviet silent film by Ukrainian director Alexander Dovzhenko, first shown on 13 April 1928. This was the fourth film by Dovzhenko, but the first one which was widely reviewed and discussed in the media. This was also the last film by Dovzhenko for which he was not the sole scriptwriter.
Aerograd
Aerograd (, , also referred to as Air City or Frontier) is a 1935 Soviet drama film by Ukrainian director Oleksandr Dovzhenko, a coproduction between Mosfilm and VUFKU. It is an adventure story set in the Soviet Far East in the future.
Arsenal
1929 film directed by Alexander Dovzhenko
Shchors
1939 film by Alexander Dovzhenko, Yuliya Solntseva
Enthusiasm
1930 film by Dziga Vertov
The Diplomatic Pouch
1927 film by Alexander Dovzhenko
The White Bird Marked with Black
1970 film by Yuri Ilyenko
Queen of the Gas Station
1962 film by Nikolai Litus
Ivan
1932 film directed by Alexander Dovzhenko
The Stone Cross
1968 film by Leonid Osyka
Taras Shevchenko
1951 film by Aleksandr Alov and Igor Savchenko
The Lost Letter
1972 film by Borys Ivchenko
Ukraine in Flames
1943 Soviet documentary war film
Chervona Ruta
1971 film
Countermeasure
1974 film
Annychka
Annychka (, ) is a 1968 Soviet-Ukrainian drama. The film, which was produced at the Dovzhenko Film Studios, takes place in 1943 and is about a Hutsul girl played by Lyubov Rumyantseva. In 1969, it received a Golden Tower award at the Phnom Penh Film Festival in Cambodia. The director received a special prize at the Kyiv Film Festival. In the USSR alone, in 1969 25.1 million people saw it.
Babylon XX
1979 film by Ivan Mykolaychuk
Oktyabryukhov and Dekabryukhov
1928 film
The Formula of Rainbow
1966 film by George Jungvald-Khilkevitch
Famine-33 (movie)
Famine-33 () is a 1991 Soviet drama film by Oles Yanchuk about the Holodomor famine in Ukraine, and based on the novel The Yellow Prince by Vasyl Barka. The film is told through the lives of the Katrannyk family of six. The film was made on a voluntary basis. The main producer of the film was the Transcarpathian bank "Lisbank", which was to receive a share of rental income. However, after watching the finished film, the producers were so moved that they decided to refuse to return the money, and insisted that as many people as possible see the film.
Prometheus
1936 film by Ivan Kavaleridze
The song is always with us
1975 Soviet Ukrainian musical film directed by Vіktor Gavrilovitch Storojenko