Mamay

Mamay

80 mins | Drama, History | Feb. 19, 2003

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. "

Mamay

80 mins | Drama, History | Feb. 19, 2003

Mamay
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. "
IMDb rating 7.2
Producers Dovzhenko Film Studios
Original title Мамай
Directors Oles Sanin
Writers Oles Sanin

Cast

Andrii Bilous

as Mamay

Viktoria Spesivtseva

as Tatar woman

Nazl Sejtablaeva

as Little Tatar girl

Serhiy Romanyuk

as Eldest brother

Oles Sanin

as Middle brother

Akhtem Seitablaiev

as Tatar warrior

Eldar Akimov

as Tatar warrior

Emil Rasilov

as Tatar warrior