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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Leonid_OsykaLeonid Osyka - Wikipedia

    Leonid Mikhailovich Osyka (Ukrainian: Леонід Михайлович Осика) (8 March 1940 in Kyiv – 16 September 2001 in Kyiv) was a Ukrainian movie director, producer, and screen writer.

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0652673Leonid Osyka - IMDb

    Leonid Osyka was born on 8 March 1940 in Kiev, Ukrainian SSR, USSR [now Ukraine]. He was a director and writer, known for Hetmanski kleinody (1993), Trevozhnyy mesyats Veresen (1977) and Did Livogo Kraynogo (1973). He died on 16 September 2001 in Kyiv, Ukraine.

    • January 1, 1
    • Kiev, Ukrainian SSR, USSR [now Ukraine]
    • January 1, 1
    • Kyiv, Ukraine
  3. The Stone Cross ( Russian: Каменный крест, lit. ' The Stone Cross ', Ukrainian: Камінний хрест) is a 1968 Soviet drama film. Directed by Leonid Osyka, it is based on Vasyl Stefanyk 's short stories The Thief and The Stone Cross .

  4. Leonid Osyka was born on 8 March 1940 in Kiev, Ukrainian SSR, USSR [now Ukraine]. He was a director and writer, known for Hetmanski kleinody (1993), Podarunok na imenyny (1991) and Trevozhnyy mesyats Veresen (1977).

    • March 8, 1940
    • September 16, 2001
  5. Kaminnyy khrest: Directed by Leonid Osyka. With Borislav Brondukov, Daniil Ilchenko, Yekaterina Mateyk, Ivan Mikolaychuk. The Stone Cross (Kaminnyy khrest, 1968), based on two short stories ("The Stone Cross" and "The Thief," both published in 1900) by Galician novelist Vasyl Stefanyk.

    • (260)
    • Drama
    • Leonid Osyka
    • 1968-06-10
  6. The Pleasures and Problems of Leonid Osyka's Zakhar Berkut: Poetic Cinema and Its Limits* Abstract: This article discusses the aesthetic and sociopolitical contexts of Zakhar Berkut, a 1972 film by the Ukrainian director Leonid Osyka, one of the leading figures of Ukrainian poetic cinema. An ambitious adaptation of a canonical nineteenth-century

  7. Osyka, Leonid [Осика, Леонід], b 8 March 1940 in Kyiv, d 16 September 2001 in Kyiv. Film director. He graduated from the State Institute of Cinema Arts in Moscow (1966).