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  1. Mikhail Nikolaevich Ptashuk (Russian: Михаил Николаевич Пташу́к, Belarusian: Міхаі́л Мікала́евіч Пташу́к); January 28, 1943 – April 26, 2002 was a Soviet and Belarusian film director and screenwriter.

  2. Mikhail Ptashuk was born on 28 January 1943 in Fedyuki, Brest Oblast, Byelorussian SSR, USSR [now Belarus]. He was a director and actor, known for V avguste 44-go (2001), The Burning Land (2003) and Kooperativ Politbyuro ili budet dolgim proshchanie (1992).

    • Director, Actor, Writer
    • January 28, 1943
    • Mikhail Ptashuk
    • April 26, 2002
  3. A respected Russian film director often sited by his contemporaries for his remarkable professionalism, Mikhail Ptashuk's films were often marked by frequent introspective journeys into the psychology of their protagonists and a recurring theme of Belarusian nobility during the Great Patriotic War.

    • January 28, 1943
    • April 27, 2002
  4. Mikhail Ptashuk was born on 28 January 1943 in Fedyuki, Brest Oblast, Byelorussian SSR, USSR [now Belarus]. He was a director and actor, known for V avguste 44-go (2001), The Burning Land (2003) and Kooperativ Politbyuro ili budet dolgim proshchanie (1992).

  5. May 4, 2001 · Action Mystery Drama. The movie is set in Belarus, where a team of counter-intelligence officers is given only three days to find a German radio operator posing as a Soviet soldier, behind soviet lines, on the eve of a major offensive. Director. Mikhail Ptashuk.

    • (1.9K)
    • Action, Mystery, Drama
    • Mikhail Ptashuk
    • 2001-05-04
  6. Михаил Пташук — director, actor. 59 years (Soviet Union). biography, photo, best movies and TV shows, awards, news, birthday and age, Real name. «The Burning Land» (2003), «V avguste 44-go» (2000), «Game of Imagination» (1995), «Kooperativ Politbyuro ili budet dolgim proshchanie» (1992), «Our Armoured Train» (1988)...

  7. Introduction. The prominence of narratives about World War II in contemporary Russia been theorized in the context of Russian society's reassessments of the past and the working through of the traumas of Stalinism.