Known for Directing

Sergei Bondarchuk (25 September 1920 — 20 October 1994) was a Soviet director, actor, and screenwriter. People's Artist of the USSR (1952). Academy Awards winner (War and Peace, 1969). BAFTA winner (Waterloo, 1971). His directorial debut was Fate of a Man, a WWII classic where he portrayed the main role. Bondarchuk is considered a master of big scale pieces with epic battle scenes that involved thousands of extras (War and Peace, Waterloo). He often starred star in his films, as well as cast his family, notably his wife, actor Irina Skobtseva (e.g. War and Peace, Vybor Tseli, Molchanie Doktora Ivensa). In late 1980s-early 1990s Bondarchuk started his long-term passion project – an adaptation of an epic novel “And Quiet Flows the Don,” together with the UK and Italy; however, the work couldn't be finished before the actor-director passed away in 1994. His son, actor-director Fyodor Bondarchuk, finished the piece in 2006.
2021
as self (archive)
1968
as Pierre Bezukhov
1966
as Pierre Bezukhov
1965
as Pierre Bezukhov
2006
as General Krasnov
1967
as Pierre Bezukhov
1986
as Boris Godunov
1975
as pvt. Ivan Zvyagintsev
1953
as Тихон Прокофьев
1978
as Stepan Kasatsky / Father Sergius
1967
as Pierre Bezukhov
1979
1978
as Richard Bradbury
1970
as Dr. Mikhail Lvovich Astrov
1948
as Comrade Valko
1969
as Martin
1979
as Narrator (voice)
1990
as Selim
1953
as Tikhon Prokofiev
1985