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  1. Dersu Uzala (Russian: Дерсу Узала, Japanese: デルス·ウザーラ, romanized: Derusu Uzāra; alternative U.S. title: Dersu Uzala: The Hunter) is a 1975 Soviet-Japanese biographical adventure drama film directed and co-written by Akira Kurosawa, his only non-Japanese-language film and his only 70mm film.

  2. Dec 20, 1977 · Dersu Uzala: Directed by Akira Kurosawa. With Yuriy Solomin, Maksim Munzuk, Mikhail Bychkov, Vladimir Khrulyov. The Russian army sends an explorer on an expedition to the snowy Siberian wilderness where he makes friends with a seasoned local hunter.

    • (34K)
    • Adventure, Biography, Drama
    • Akira Kurosawa
    • 1977-12-20
  3. Dersu Uzala. Rent Dersu Uzala on Prime Video, or buy it on Prime Video. "Dersu Uzala" is epic in form yet intimate in scope. Set in the forests of Eastern Siberia at the turn of the...

    • (15)
    • Akira Kurosawa
    • G
    • Maxim Munzuk
  4. Jun 15, 2020 · A great and wonderful film. Not only with a good soundtrack, it captures a setting and culture that is commonly overlooked. It has times where the camera angles are beautiful, and dives into a great story.

    • 142 min
  5. Overview. A military explorer meets and befriends a Goldi man in Russia’s unmapped forests. A deep and abiding bond evolves between the two men, one civilized in the usual sense, the other at home in the glacial Siberian woods. Akira Kurosawa. Director, Screenplay. Vladimir Arsenyev. Novel. Yuriy Nagibin. Screenplay.

  6. Dersu Uzala (1975) -- (Movie Clip) Three Mighty People Native Dersu (Maksim Munzuk, title character) winning over Russian military cartographer Arseneyev (Yuriy Solomin) and his crew, with wisdom and sharpshooting, director Akira Kurosawa working on location in Sibera, in the Soviet-financed Dersu Uzala. 1975.

  7. Jul 17, 1995 · Dersu Uzala is one of the final and most persuasive statements of a major thesis in the director’s films: the fact of courage in the face of death. Kurosawa made the acquaintance of Desu Uzala thirty years earlier, when he read Vladimir Arseniev’s account of charting the Russian-Manchurian border in the earlier part of this century.