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Today's Russia: A Literary Landscape with Stephen Fry

Literary gadabout Stephen Fry examines how Russian literature has changed and influenced the written word. Stephen Fry introduces this film with the story of a passionate affair: "I think I was about fourteen years old when I first read Alexander Pushkin's 'Eugene Onegin' and Dostoyevsky's 'Crime and Punishment'. It was the beginning of a life-long love affair with great Russian literature: Tolstoy's 'War and Peace', 'Anna Karenina'...." Like many youthful infatuations, Fry moved on to other interests, and lost touch with Russian writing. He was not alone. After the collapse of the USSR in 1990, we in the West stopped reading Russian literature. But that does not mean that the Russians stopped writing. The programme introduces us to six of the biggest stars of Russian literature, their works, and shows a side of today's Russia that viewers do not normally get a chance to see. New works - including original English translations - are read by Fry, who is inserted into award-winning original animations of these fictional worlds.

Year: 2013
Genre: Documentaries, General Docos
Country: UK
Starring: Stephen Fry
Duration: 54 Minutes
Rating: PG - Violence and coarse language
Location in store: Documentary (General)

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