
Age: 37
male
Aleksandr Andreevich Petrov (Russian: Александр Андреевич Петров; born 25 January 1989; Pereslavl-Zalesskiy) is a Russian actor, known for his roles in T-34 (2019), Attraction (2017) and Gogol. The Beginning (2017). After school he entered the economic department of the University of Pereslavl at the Institute of Program Systems of the Russian Academy of Sciences. However, he soon realized that this was not for him - when he began to participate in the student team of the KVN and the performances of the theatre (also student) "Entreprise". During the theatrical festival, he took part in the master classes of teachers of the Russian Institute of Theatre Arts - GITIS and made his final choice. In 2008 he left the university and went to Moscow. From his first attempt he managed to enter the GITIS for the directing department in the workshop of L. Kheifets. In 2012-2013, Alexander served in the Moscow Theatre "Et Cetera". Based on the results of diploma theatricals, he received an offer from Aleksandr Kalyagin about enrollment in the troupe of the Moscow theatre "Et Cetera". He played Graziano in "Shylock" based on William Shakespeare's play "The Venetian Merchant", directed by Robert Sturua. In 2013 he was admitted to the troupe of the Yermolova Theatre, under the leadership of Oleg Menshikov. In the Yermolova Theatre, he played Hamlet in William Shakespeare's tragedy, directed by Valeriy Sarkisov. Petrov made his debut in 2010 in an episodic role of the television series Voices. In 2012, he played a major role in the series While the fern is blooming. In the 2015 crime drama serial The Method produced by Alexander Tsekalo's Sreda, Petrov played the supporting role of police officer Zhenya. In the same year he also acted in the TV series Fartsa, by the same production company, this time in the lead role. The series is about Fartsovka — the illegal acquisition of consumer goods and currency from foreigners during the Soviet Union. He played Andrei Trofimov, an aspiring writer. In 2017, he acted in Sreda's feature film — Gogol. The Beginning. In this horror-fantasy picture, loosely based on Evenings on a Farm Near Dikanka, he portrayed writer Nikolai Gogol. He played one of the main roles in the disaster-film Attraction (2017) by Fyodor Bondarchuk. According to the plot of the film; over the city there is an unidentified object, which later, for the safety of citizens, is shot down. Only when it falls to the ground do experts find that this object is of unearthly origin. In 2018 he acted in the musical romantic drama about figure skating, Ice. Film news and database website Kinopoisk named Alexander Petrov as the most popular Russian actor of 2017. He again played the role of Artyom in Invasion, the sequel of Attraction in 2020.

Alexander Petrov

Anatoly Quinatchev
for Anatoly Quinatchev in Cold War : Mythological Case
Suggested by jeanpaulvalley

1975, the Vietnam War has just come to an end and American troops have left the country, with the shame of defeat. However, during a final mission there, the best Colonel Morgan's men, a soldier who had difficulty digesting defeat, managed to find a top secret file that the Viet Cong shared with Soviet allies. They discover the existence of an island hidden in the mist, not so far from Vietnam, not found on any map, where there is a weapon that would allow Mother Russia to win the Cold War ! While the Kremlin has already sent men there, Uncle Sam is doing the same with an entire army that would like to return to the USA, but they're promised that this will be their last mission. However, on this vast forest island, there are creatures who only wanted to live peacefully, but who once again are bothered by humans hungry for a power that they cannot control anyway ! Still having bad memories because of what they lost thirty years earlier, the children of Echidna will not differentiate between the Soviets and the Americans, who, if they want to survive, will have to consider a very difficult option : collaborate ! However, in this remote place, the worst monsters are not necessarily those you think of at the first place...