Horizon (1932 film)
Horizon (Russian: Горизонт) is a 1932[1] Soviet film directed by Lev Kuleshov.[2][3][4]
Horizon | |
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Russian: Горизонт | |
Directed by | Lev Kuleshov |
Written by |
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Starring |
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Cinematography | Konstantin Kuznetsov |
Country | Soviet Union |
Language | Russian |
Plot
The film tells about the Jew Lev Horizont, who emigrated to the United States. There he joined the ranks of the army, went to Russia and transferred to the side of the Soviet army.[5]
Starring
- Nikolay Batalov as Lev Abramovich Gorizont (as N. Batalov)
- Dmitriy Kara-Dmitriev as The Watchmaker (as D. Kara-Dmitriev)
- E. Sheremetyeva as First Girl
- Nikolai Gladkov as Kid (as N. Gladkov)
- Andrei Gorchilin as Monya (as A. Gorchilin)
- Sergey Komarov as Subofficer / American policeman / Priest (as S. Komarov)
- Yelena Kuzmina as Second Girl - Isaak's Daughter, Rose (as E. Kuzmina)
- Mikhail Doronin as Isaak Gorizont - Leo's Uncle (as M. Doronin)
- Mikhail Doller as Smith (as M. Dollar)
- Konstantin Khokhlov as Manufacturer (as K. Khoklov)[6]
gollark: I wonder why the USB stick on my thing is so slow.
gollark: 9223372036854775808 is *not real*.
gollark: Haskell would do it far more "based"ly.
gollark: So the obvious approach would be to selfhost your own custom ABR instance.
gollark: Well, ABR's reminders are admittedly not optimal for safety-sensitive reminders and also are not repeating.
References
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