From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Moscow Saga
Directed byDmitry Barschevsky
Written byNatalya Violina
Produced byAnton Barschevsky
Starring Yuri Solomin
Inna Churikova
Alexander Baluev
CinematographyKrasimir Kostov
Music by Alexander Zhurbin
Production
companies
Risk Film and Video Studio
Distributed by Channel One Russia
Release date
  • October 11, 2004 (2004-10-11)
Running time
1144 minutes
CountryRussia
LanguageRussian

Moscow Saga ( Russian: Московская сага, romanizedMoscovskaya Saga) is a Russian television series loosely based on the eponymous trilogy Vasily Aksyonov. The shooting took place in the winter and spring of 2004. It aired from 11 October to 12 November 2004 on Channel One Russia. [1]

Plot

Moscow Saga shows the fate of family of medicine professor Boris Nikitich Gradov from the mid-1920s to mid-1950s against the background of the history of the new Soviet state. Boris' character represents the old dynasty of Russian doctors. His sons and daughter did not continue in his footsteps, but instead chose other professions. The eldest son, Nikita, joined the military; the younger, Kirill, became a Marxist theoretician; and Boris' daughter Nina became a writer. [2]

Cast [3]

References

External links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Moscow Saga
Directed byDmitry Barschevsky
Written byNatalya Violina
Produced byAnton Barschevsky
Starring Yuri Solomin
Inna Churikova
Alexander Baluev
CinematographyKrasimir Kostov
Music by Alexander Zhurbin
Production
companies
Risk Film and Video Studio
Distributed by Channel One Russia
Release date
  • October 11, 2004 (2004-10-11)
Running time
1144 minutes
CountryRussia
LanguageRussian

Moscow Saga ( Russian: Московская сага, romanizedMoscovskaya Saga) is a Russian television series loosely based on the eponymous trilogy Vasily Aksyonov. The shooting took place in the winter and spring of 2004. It aired from 11 October to 12 November 2004 on Channel One Russia. [1]

Plot

Moscow Saga shows the fate of family of medicine professor Boris Nikitich Gradov from the mid-1920s to mid-1950s against the background of the history of the new Soviet state. Boris' character represents the old dynasty of Russian doctors. His sons and daughter did not continue in his footsteps, but instead chose other professions. The eldest son, Nikita, joined the military; the younger, Kirill, became a Marxist theoretician; and Boris' daughter Nina became a writer. [2]

Cast [3]

References

External links


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