Gost (Aleksandr Kaydanovsky, 1987).srt
-
Alex Nicolaou (1) -
Anne Charlotte Robertson (1) -
Benjamin Rocher (1) -
Blaine Cade (1) -
Brett Pierce (1) -
Burr Steers (1) -
Carl Bessai (1) -
Casey Walker (1) -
Claude Barras (1) -
Corbin Bernsen (1) -
Dan O'Bannon (1) -
David Gebroe (1) -
David Irving (1) -
Glasgow Phillips (1) -
Gregg Bishop (1) -
Henry Hobson (1) -
Howard McCain (1) -
James Glenn Dudelson (1) -
Jason Lei Howden (1) -
Jesse T. Cook (1) -
John Geddes (1) -
Jordan Rubin (1) -
Julián Lara (1) -
Justin Benson (1) -
Ken Wiederhorn (1) -
Kevin Gates (1) -
Kiah Roache-Turner (1) -
Lee Su-jin (1) -
Logan McMillan (1) -
Mark Goldblatt (1) -
Murat Emir Eren (1) -
Naoyuki Tomomatsu (1) -
Neill Blomkamp (1) -
Nikolai Pigarev (1) -
Pablo Parés (1) -
Ramón Luque (1) -
Richard Kletter (1) -
Robbie Pickering (1) -
Rodrigo Aragão (1) -
Rolf Peter Kahl (1) -
Sakichi Sato (1) -
Steven C. Miller (1) -
Tamara Kotevska (1) -
Tatjana Turanskyj (1) -
Tobias Nölle (1) -
Tor Ramsey (1) -
Wolf Wolff (1) -
Yared Zeleke (1) -
Yorgos Noussias (1) -
Zachary Ramelan (1)
Aleksandr Kaydanovskiy (Russian: Алекса́ндр Леони́дович Кайдано́вский; 23 July 1946, Rostov-on-Don, USSR - 3 December 1995, Moscow, Russia) was a Soviet and Russian actor and film director.
His best known roles are in films such as At Home Among Strangers (1974), Telokhranitel/The Bodyguard (1979) and Stalker (1979).
Prior to pursuing an acting career, Kaidanovsky attended technical college where he was training to become a welder. Apparently a prospect of becoming a worker did not appeal to him and in 1965 he started studying acting at The Rostov Theatre School and the Schukin Institute in Moscow. Before completing the course he took his first part in the film A Mysterious Wall, (1967) and upon graduation in 1969, he worked as stage actor.
In 1985 he directed A Simple Death, which was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1987 Cannes Film Festival.
Kaidanovsky made his theatre debut at the Eugene Vakhtangov Theatre in 1969. In 1971 he was invited to join MKHAT, the Moscow Arts Theatre, the best classical theatre in Russia, a rare privilege for a 25-year-old graduate.
He made his major film debut in Yours Among Strangers and a Stranger Among Yours (1974), and over the next few years appeared in some two dozen films, including the satirical comedy Diamonds for Dictatorship of the Proletariat (1976) and The Life of Beethoven (1980). At his peak in the '70s Kaidanovsky was among Soviet Russia's most popular actors, and it was at this point that famed Soviet director Andrei Tarkovsky, impressed by the looks and the acting technique of Kaidanovsky in Diamonds, invited him to play the title-role in his new film, Stalker (1979). This role earned Kaidanovsky international acclaim. wiki
Director (5 credits)
1989 Songlines (Video) (video "For a Million")
1989 Zhena kerosinshchika
1987 Gost
1985 Prostaya smert
1983 Sad (Short)
IMDB
Enlaces completados:
OK Gost (Aleksandr Kaydanovsky, 1987)
OK Prostaya smert (Aleksandr Kaydanovskiy, 1985)
OK Sad (Aleksandr Kaydanovskiy, 1983)