David Bek
The Armenian national hero, David Bek, leads a major Armenian uprising against Safavid Persia in the Syunik region in the 18th century.
Amo Bek-Nazaryan
Amo Bek-Nazaryan
Vladimir Solovyov
Y. Dukor
S. Harutyunyan
Casts & Crew
Hrachia Nersisyan
Avet Avetisyan
Hasmik Agopyan
Arus Asryan
Grigor Avetyan
L. Zohrabyan
Murad Kostanyan
David Malyan
T. Ayvazyan
Vaghinak Marguni
Frunze Dovlatyan
Tatyana Makhmuryan
L. Shahparonyan
Vladimir Yershov
Evgeniy Samoylov
Lev Sverdlin
Ivane Perestiani
Arman Kotikyan
H. Stepanyan
D. Pogosyan
Also Directed by Amo Bek-Nazaryan
After the play of same name of Jafar Jabbarli. This melodrama is about the woman who had unhappy homelife and tried to free herself from shariat rules.
During the Civil War, a long time friends Ilya, Tanya and Tevdore decide to find the treasure, which is hidden by the counter revolutionists. After many precarious efforts the disguised friends manage somehow to penetrate the enemy’s camp and attend their leadership’s party. Tanya enchants the enemy Commander Kleshchuk and gets hold of the key of his apartment. The friends steal the treasure, baffle Kleshchuk’s pursuit and return the treasure to the government.
A Kurdish chieftain covets a local beauty whom he'd like to make his second wife, but the girl resists him.
The movie is about the suppressed revolt of "khaspushes", Persian peasants and craftsmen in 1891.
The film is about the civil war in the Zangezur (Syunik) province of Armenia in the early 1920s. The last Dashnak battalions headed by Sparapet Nzhdeh still opposed both the incursion of Red Army and the local Bolshevik partisans.
Love, adventure, and revolutionary uprising in 19th century Georgia.
A poor but honest fisherman Pepo opposes a cunning trader Zimzimov, who tries to rob him by trickery refusing to pay a lost bill. Pepo choses prison to paying-off his honour.
Namus (Armenian: Նամուս, meaning "honor") is a 1925 silent film by Hamo Beknazarian, based on Alexander Shirvanzade's 1885 novel of the same name, which denounces the despotic rites and customs of Caucasian families. It is widely recognized as the first Armenian feature film.
Nunu and Iago are in love with each other. The married guard Girgola wants to get hold of the woman. Girgola gets Iago arrested and makes Nunu marry his retarded brother. On one occasion he finds the woman alone and rapes her. Nunu jumps in the river to commit suicide but gets saved by Iago’s friends. Iago escapes from jail, but Girgola attacks his hideout and haves him killed together with his friends. Girgola also kills Nunu’s old father and accuses Nunu of the murder. Nunu is tied to a pole and dies in the exile.
An old, boring technician remembers a cruelly suppressed strike of oil industry workers in Baku.