Cinema of Bulgaria

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Part of a series of articles on
Bulgarians

Culture of Bulgaria
Literature · Music · Art
Cinema · Names · Cuisine
Dances · Costume · Sport

By region or country
(including the diaspora)

Republic of Macedonia
Serbia · Banat (Serbia/Romania)
Bessarabia (Ukraine/Moldova)
United Kingdom · United States
Hungary · Greece · Albania
Bulgarians in Turkey
(Pomaks, Eastern Thrace, Anatolia)

Religion
Bulgarian Orthodox · Muslim
Roman Catholic · Protestant

Languages and dialects
spoken by Bulgarians

Bulgarian · Banat Bulgarian · Shopi

History · Rulers

v  d  e

Contents

[edit] Directors

  • Rangel Valchanov
  • Eduard Zahariev
  • Vulo Radev
  • Nikola Korabov
  • Ivan Andonov
  • Lyudmil Staykov
  • Nikolay Volev
  • Metodi Andonov
  • Hristo Hristov
  • Iglika Triffonova
  • Binka Jeliazkova
  • Kiran Kolarov
  • Vladimir Yanchev
  • Sophia Peer
  • Slatan Dudow
  • Nikola Kovachev
  • Dimitar Petkov
  • Zornitsa-Sophia

[edit] Actors and actresses

See also List of Bulgarian actors

[edit] Notable Films

  • Opashkata Na Diavola- Devil's Tail
  • Osadeni Dushi- Doomed Souls
  • Kradetzat Na Praskovi- The Peach-Garden Trespasser
  • Tyutyun- Tobacco (nominated for a Golden Palm award at the Cannes Film Festival in 1963)
  • Svatbite na Yoan Asen- The Weddings of King Ioan Assen
  • Vchera- Yesterday
  • Asparuh- Khan Asparoukh
  • Vreme Na Nasilie- Time of Violence
  • Kozijat Rog- The Goat Horn
  • Orkestar Bez Ime- A Nameless Band
  • Mila ot Mars- Mila from Mars
  • Opasen Char- Dangerous Charm
  • Otkradnati Ochi- Stolen Eyes
  • Pismo do Amerika- Letter to America
  • Razsledvane- Investigation
  • Dami Kanyat- Ladies Choice
  • Toplo- Warmth
  • Lyubimetz 13- Favourite #13
  • Gospodin za Edin Den- King for a Day

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

Languages