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Nomadic Warrior

Nomadic Warrior

Drama, History, War

Sergey Bodrov, Ivan Pasechkin

Kuno Becker, Li Jie, Jay Hernandez

2005

France, Kazakhstan

Film review analysis↗

Completed

Kazakh

112 minutes

2025-02-20 02:50:00

Detailed introduction

This film (drama)Also known asКөшпенділер,is aFrance, KazakhstanProducerwomen sex,At2005Released in year 。The dialogue language isKazakh,Current Douban rating6.8(For reference only)。
The film tells the story of the growth of the Kazakh Khan Abulaiti. It adopts a narration style, unfolding before us with grand war scenes: in the vast, boundless land, from the Altai Mountains to the Caspian Sea, ancient nomadic Kazakh people have lived; on this land, wave after wave of enemies have fallen, leaving ashes and bones behind them, which is their greatest disaster. The film strives to define Kazakhstan's national ideology, focusing on how to unite the various tribes of Kazakhstan in the 18th century to collectively resist foreign invasion.   About the film:   Central Asia has long been considered a desert for the film industry. While Central Asian countries have their own film industries, they often struggle to produce films that have an impact on the world due to limitations in funding, technology, and concepts. However, a recent film titled "Nomadic Warrior" not only set a new investment record for Central Asian cinema but also features grand scenes and a moving storyline. This is the highest-budget film in Central Asia, reflecting a theme of Kazakh national pride, and can be regarded as an epic film of Kazakhstan.   (Note: The version circulating online is a Russian-dubbed version, with Chinese subtitles translated from Russian, which is poorly done and lacks an understanding of history. Therefore, even the circulating synopsis contains errors, but this does not overshadow the excellence of the original film.   Here are a few significant translation errors: Kazakhs are translated as Cossacks, which are two completely unrelated ethnic groups. This idiot seems to have learned too much Russian and understands Russian history but not Asian history; ZHUNGAR: refers to the Mongolian Zungar tribe but is translated as "Zhengar"; the protagonist's story is about Kazakh Khan Abulaiti's growth, yet it is translated as Apula. Even more absurdly, the film's description mistakenly claims it is about the growth of Kazakhstan's President Nazarbayev.)