Admiral Ushakov
0 sources
Admiral Ushakov
Summary
Admiral Ushakov is a film[1]. It ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (37 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Admiral Ushakov's instance of is recorded as film[3].
- Admiral Ushakov was directed by Mikhail Romm[4].
- Alexander Stein wrote the screenplay for Admiral Ushakov[5].
- Admiral Ushakov's composer is recorded as Aram Khachaturian[6].
- Admiral Ushakov's genre is historical drama[7].
- Admiral Ushakov's genre is biographical film[8].
- Admiral Ushakov's genre is war film[9].
- Admiral Ushakov's genre is drama film[10].
- Fyodor Ushakov is named after Admiral Ushakov[11].
- A cast member of Admiral Ushakov was Ivan Pereverzev[12].
- A cast member of Admiral Ushakov was Boris Livanov[13].
- A cast member of Admiral Ushakov was Nikolay Svobodin[14].
- A cast member of Admiral Ushakov was Nikolay Chistyakov[15].
- A cast member of Admiral Ushakov was Gennadi Yudin[16].
- A cast member of Admiral Ushakov was Vladimir Druzhnikov[17].
- A cast member of Admiral Ushakov was Aleksey Alekseev[18].
- A cast member of Admiral Ushakov was Sergei Bondarchuk[19].
- A cast member of Admiral Ushakov was Mikhail Pugovkin[20].
- A cast member of Admiral Ushakov was Nikolay Khryashchikov[21].
- A cast member of Admiral Ushakov was Georgi Yumatov[22].
- A cast member of Admiral Ushakov was Pavel Volkov[23].
- A cast member of Admiral Ushakov was Olga Zhizneva[24].
- A cast member of Admiral Ushakov was Nikolay Volkov[25].
- A cast member of Admiral Ushakov was Ivan Solovyov[26].
- A cast member of Admiral Ushakov was Vladimir Etush[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Admiral Ushakov was directed by Mikhail Romm[4]. Alexander Stein wrote the screenplay for it[5]. Cast members include Ivan Pereverzev[12], Boris Livanov[13], Nikolay Svobodin[14], Nikolay Chistyakov[15], Gennadi Yudin[16], and Vladimir Druzhnikov[17].
Publication
Publication dates include April 23, 1953[28], October 8, 1953[29], and November 13, 1953[30]. The original language of Admiral Ushakov was Russian[31]. Genres include historical drama[7], biographical film[8], war film[9], and drama film[10].
Why It Matters
Admiral Ushakov ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (37 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[32] It is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[33]