0
83 min
A strange film as beautifully jumbled as the political environment out of which it sprang, like a handsome weed, "Son of Mongolia" is a travelogue of unique and authentic richness, an amusing Far Eastern horse opera of picaresque character, and a scientifically valuable anthropological document in which the Soviet film industry may well take pride. Objective and modern, yet permeated with a fresh folk quality that goes back to the reckless and lovely Tartary of Genghis Khan, it rises above all its inescapable Soviet-isms into a new frontier region of plains, mountains, tents and herds, a world still appreciably beyond the range of Western cameras.
Name | Character | Team | |
---|---|---|---|
Tseveen Chimidiin | Tseveen | Unowned | |
Sosorbaram Badrakh | Chauffeur | Unowned | |
Bat-Ochir Danzan | The Prince | Unowned | |
Gombo Dashdorj | Innkeeper | Unowned | |
Ir-Kan | Prince's Foreign Advisor | Unowned | |
Nyamyn Tsegmid | The Monk | Unowned | |
Ichinkhorloo Dashzeveg | Dulmaa | Unowned |