Best award winning movies with a highly symbolic from Uzbekistan
Check out today’s highest ranked movies with a highly symbolic from Uzbekistan! Looking for the greatest movies of all times? Here is the list of the best movies with a highly symbolic from Uzbekistan, based on the crowd's interest and popular searches from the country.
1 The Shepherd (2005)
According to a central Asian tradition, the younger brother is responsible for the wife of his brother in his absence. So 13-year-old Jamshed is too. Lack of work made his brother leave for the West to earn money. Jamshed does what he should do, even though he dreams of things that boys of his age much prefer to do. He regards his sister-in-law and his duty to her as a burden.
Info
- 2005-06-06 | Drama
Cast
- Elnur Abraev, Lola Eltoeva
Rating
- 1.0
2 Bo Ba Bu (1998)
Two barbarians in the desert find a stranded white woman and regard her as their property. A strange and exotic parable that presents a tragic three-cornered relationship in a politically incorrect and ironic way.
Info
- 1998-01-01 | Drama
Cast
- Abdrashid Abdrakhmanov, Arielle Dombasle
Rating
- 6.0
3 Man Follows Birds (1975)
Man Follows Birds is a coming-of-age story of a young Uzbek poet surrounded by violence. Farouk is fascinated by trees and Khamraev films him with a lot of melancholy and tenderness. Cast apart because he’s poor and his father’s drunk, Farouk is not happy in his village. When his father dies, he decides to go in the mountains with his best friends. Looking for nature at its purest, the two teenage boys have to deal with the cruelty of violent barbarians. Their trip will also make them meet a lost orphan girl and a wise beggar.
Info
- 1975-10-03 | Drama
Cast
- Dzhanik Fayziev, Dilorom Kambarova
Rating
- 5.1
4 Abdulladzhan, or Dedicated to Steven Spielberg (1992)
Considering that Musakov’s Abdulladzhan (1991) was dedicated to Steven Spielberg, we might suggest that these four boys embody nothing more complicated than a conflict of youthful innocence with some ominous threat—the basic workings of E.T. (1982) or War of the Worlds (2005), say. That threat, however, is best understood not through vague nationalism or warmed-over socialism, but through the other reference-point of Abdulladzhan—Tarkovskii’s Stalker (1980). Musakov leaves his boys in a simplified radiance so bright and so overexposed that it no longer looks like the skies of sunny Tashkent, but a disturbing, borderless luminosity to match the flat tonal range of Stalker’s “Zone.” Our Uzbek boys are nowhere in particular; this is a broader domain than anything international.
Info
- 1992-07-13 | Comedy / Science Fiction
Cast
- Rudzhab Adashev, Tuychi Aripov
Rating
- 5.6
Maimovie Now
to discover other
4 similar movies