Trotsky
0 sources
Trotsky
Summary
Trotsky is a miniseries[1]. Trotsky draws 155 Wikipedia views per month (miniseries category, ranking #265 of 738).[2]
Key Facts
- Trotsky's instance of is recorded as miniseries[3].
- Trotsky was directed by Alexander Kott[4].
- Trotsky's genre is biography[5].
- Trotsky's genre is drama fiction[6].
- A cast member of Trotsky was Konstantin Khabensky[7].
- A cast member of Trotsky was Olga Sutulova[8].
- A cast member of Trotsky was Maksim Matveyev[9].
- A cast member of Trotsky was Yevgeny Stychkin[10].
- A cast member of Trotsky was Mikhail Porechenkov[11].
- A cast member of Trotsky was Aleksandra Mareeva[12].
- A cast member of Trotsky was Aleksandra Remizova[13].
- A cast member of Trotsky was Orkhan Abulov[14].
- A cast member of Trotsky was Igor Chernevich[15].
- A cast member of Trotsky was Viktoriya Poltorak[16].
- A cast member of Trotsky was Sergei Garmash[17].
- A cast member of Trotsky was Mikhail Yeliseyev[18].
- A cast member of Trotsky was Vitaly Kovalenko[19].
- A cast member of Trotsky was Denis Sinyavskiy[20].
- A cast member of Trotsky was Andrei Zibrov[21].
- A cast member of Trotsky was Sergey Bezrukov[22].
- A cast member of Trotsky was Aleksandr Bargman[23].
- A cast member of Trotsky was Nikolai Kachura[24].
- A cast member of Trotsky was Dmitry Vorobyov[25].
- A cast member of Trotsky was Boris Khasanov[26].
- A cast member of Trotsky was Denis Pyanov[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Producers include Alexander Tsekalo[28] and Konstantin Ernst[29]. Trotsky was directed by Alexander Kott[4]. Cast members include Konstantin Khabensky[7], Olga Sutulova[8], Maksim Matveyev[9], Yevgeny Stychkin[10], Mikhail Porechenkov[11], and Aleksandra Mareeva[12].
Publication
Trotsky was published on +2017-00-00T00:00:00Z[30]. The original language of Trotsky was Russian[31]. Genres include biography[5] and drama fiction[6]. Trotsky was distributed by video on demand[32].
Why It Matters
Trotsky draws 155 Wikipedia views per month (miniseries category, ranking #265 of 738).[2] Trotsky has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[33]