Olga Albanova

Olga Albanova

Born: June 1, 1974
in USSR

Movies for Olga Albanova...

Delayed Happiness Syndrome
Title: Delayed Happiness Syndrome
Released: July 9, 2022
Type: Movie
40-year-old provincial Natalya Nikitina has been living in St. Petersburg for the seventh year. She works as a nurse for ailing old people and endures their countless quirks and humiliations. Once in her life, a new friend appears - a masseuse named Love, who plunges Natalia into the abyss of bright and risky adventures in search of love and happiness.
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Another Woman
Title: Another Woman
Character: Alena
Released: November 21, 2019
Type: Movie
The film’s heroine is the gynaecologist Masha, whose husband leaves her. When a man leaves his wife, he carries away all her hopes for a future. Of course, it would be noble to let the husband go, but Masha is a strong woman and begins a desperate struggle for her infidel husband Misha. The power is unequal. Masha is already well in her thirties, while the fitness-trainer Oksana is just over twenty. But behind Masha stand a great experience of life and two small children. In this situation she is ready to use the entire arsenal available, including extraterrestrial forces. The young Oksana relies only on feelings. And on her fine figure, her magnificent hair and irrepressible temperament. Who will win this fight and get the prize? And what happens when the dream of one of them will become true?
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The Tolstoy Defence
Title: The Tolstoy Defence
Character: Aleksandra Andreyevna Tolstaya
Released: September 6, 2018
Type: Movie
The shrill and tragic story about an event that involved Count Lev Nikolaevich Tolstoy. In an infantry regiment of the military based in the Tula region an offence occurs. In this regiment, the capital’s lieutenant Grigory Kolokoltsev — inspired by progressive ideas — does his service. A military tribunal and execution await the soldier charged with the offence. Kolokoltsev asks Count Tolstoy for help — and he decides to protect the innocent man. The pointed history about the complexity of choice and fidelity to one’s ideals is based on real events.
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Petersburg: Selfie
Title: Petersburg: Selfie
Released: September 22, 2016
Type: Movie
Petersburg. A Selfie comprises seven novellas about the beautiful city of St. Petersburg, Russia, shot by female directors. The film tells a story of a real, living and breathing city, rather than a mythical phantasm. Each novella tells its own story about love and loneliness, luck and hope.
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Dreams
Title: Dreams
Released: October 1, 2013
Type: Movie
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Betrayal
Title: Betrayal
Character: Girl's mother
Released: August 30, 2012
Type: Movie
While examining one of her patients, a doctor reveals that her husband is cheating with the patient's wife.
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Петля
Title: Петля
Character: Тамара
Released: October 16, 2010
Type: Movie
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Illegal
Title: Illegal
Character: Svetlana
Released: November 16, 2006
Type: Movie
Seventies. The cold war in the midst of the USSR and the West are fighting hard for secret information about each other. Soviet intelligence agencies want to save their couriers from too much attention of customs officers at the Leningrad airport. These couriers deliver to the USSR important documents obtained by our scouts in Western Europe
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The Connection
Title: The Connection
Released: June 29, 2006
Type: Movie
Ilya lives in Moscow; Nina lives in St. Petersburg. Ilya has a beautiful wife and a daughter; Nina's husband is an artist, and they have a young son. Nina occasionally travels to Moscow to see her partners in the publishing industry. Ilya sometimes comes to St. Petersburg on business. But more often they are in the train between St. Petersburg and Moscow just to see each other. Because they have an affair.
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Ragin
Title: Ragin
Released: December 23, 2004
Type: Movie
Based on a short story "Ward No. 6" by Anton Chekhov.
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Title: The Killer's Diary
Released: January 1, 2002
Type: TV
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Title: Secrecy of the investigation
Character: попрошайка
Released: September 1, 2000
Type: TV
In the center of the plot is a senior investigator named Masha Shvetsova and her male colleagues. The plot is the most vital, but, like in “Streets of Broken Lanterns,” it is seasoned with a fair amount of humor - otherwise, how can the audience (and the heroes) endure countless morgues, identifications and other “cute” charms of the investigative routine?