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  1. The Long Farewell (Russian: Долгие проводы, romanized: Dolgie provody) is a Soviet film drama directed by Kira Muratova. It was filmed in 1971, but it was put on a shelf and was only released on the screens in perestroika in 1987.

  2. The long farewell [1] is a poison originating from Asshai. As its name implies, it takes some time to take effect, but it is highly lethal. One single drop making contact with the skin is enough to bring about death. Symptoms include bleeding from the nose, blurred vision, and nausea.

  3. Aug 24, 2023 · Through the 1970s and much of the 1980s, Kira Muratova’s stirring films “Brief Encounters” and “The Long Farewell” went unseen, banned by the Soviet Union.

    • Natalia Winkelman
  4. May 8, 2022 · The Long Farewell movie trailer (1971 USSR) A single woman has put all her efforts into raising her only son, Sasha. When Sasha grew up to become a teenager, he got tired of the nagging of her...

    • 1 min
    • 291
    • Fred Rosa
  5. The Long Farewell. With its daring formalist freedom, Kira Muratovas pointillist family portrait so perplexed and unnerved Soviet censors that it effectively halted her career for years afterward.

    • Yevgeniya Vasilyevna
  6. Aug 1, 1971 · The Long Farewell: Directed by Kira Muratova. With Zinaida Sharko, Oleg Vladimirsky, Yuriy Kayurov, Svetlana Kabanova. A single mother is confused by the changes in her teenage son, who has become distant since spending summer vacation with his father.

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  8. The Long Farewell is a 1958 detective novel by the British writer Michael Innes. It is the fifteenth novel in his series featuring John Appleby, a senior detective with the Metropolitan Police. The title refers to a quote from Cardinal Wolsey in William Shakespeare's Henry VIII. Synopsis