Issue 4353. Last Updated: 03/19/2010

02/20/2004

Paid access archive

Fathers and Sons

Russian cinema is as dynastic as ever, with youthful stars like Alexei German Jr. making easy headway along directorial paths blazed by their fathers decades ago.

Digital Armies

With 15,000 computer warriors signing up in just three months, a massive Russian role-playing game, Sphere, spells big business for Russia's digital community.

Reality Check

Thirty kilometers from St. Petersburg, a juvenile penal colony is putting on a play that strikes close to home -- scenes from Dostoevsky's ""Notes From the House of the Dead.""

Letter to an Oligarch

While Dmitry Shagin and the Mitki artists no longer suffer the police raids of 20 years ago, they still address questions of social injustice in their offbeat manner.

100 Years On

A century after working with Auguste Rodin, two women sculptors -- Camille Claudel and Anna Golubkina -- go on exhibit together with their world-famous teacher.

Balkan Rock

Russia's Balkan-music fever gets stoked with a visit from Spitulal de Urgenta, a Romanian folk band with a modern beat.

The Good Liar

Polish writer Gustaw Herling's posthumous collection of stories is a reminder of how effortlessly fact can be woven into fiction, with no suspension of disbelief required.

Soviet Relict

Tom Bissell's new book zeroes in on the ambivalence that Uzbeks feel for the Soviet empire that brought them economic advance and cultural devastation.

Just a Second ...

Controversial artist Dmitry Bulnygin, known for creating art from swastikas, treats Moscow to selections from a yearly festival of extra-short films in Novosibirsk.

Russian Cinema Council is the Voice for Film Abroad

A video distribution company has taken charge of the all too difficult task of marketing Russian films abroad, with technological standards fit for the world market.

Conventions Aside

In a season bursting with commercial theater and pop, Elmo Nuganen's production of 'Tout Paye' does full justice to the routine, while never settling for the easy guffaw.


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