
2003/02/19 • Released • Tatar, Ukrainian
Mamay draws on traditional Ukranian and Tatar folktales for its Romeo and Juliet-like love story and parable about chivalry and the struggle for freedom. Hundreds of years ago, in the wild steppes of Crimea that form an uneasy border between East and West, Europe and Asia, nomad and farmer, the proud Cossack Mamay falls in love with the Tatar beauty Omai. The title, like the storyline, holds a variety of different meanings taken from different cultures. In Turkic languages, it means "no one," but it was also the name of a famous Mongol conqueror, the great grandson of Ghengis-Khan. In Persian legends, mamay literally means "the spirit of the steppes. "
Director : Oles Sanin

Cold Sunday
November 8, 2012

Female Trouble
October 11, 1974

The Road
September 1, 1982

Cries and Whispers
December 21, 1972

Monty Python Live at the Hollywood Bowl
June 25, 1982

Gaslight
August 31, 1940

Accattone
September 25, 1961

The Sicilian Clan
December 5, 1969

Abbott and Costello Meet the Mummy
April 16, 1955

Never Cry Wolf
October 7, 1983

Mrs Brown
July 18, 1997

The Sweet Hereafter
September 25, 1997

Ordet
January 9, 1955

Outrage Coda
October 7, 2017

A Nos Amours
November 16, 1983

The Voice of the Moon
March 5, 1990

Shotgun Stories
October 1, 2007

Thesis on a Homicide
January 17, 2013

Labyrinth of Passion
September 29, 1982

The Grifters
August 8, 1990