
Sputnik
The only survivor did not come back alone.
At the height of the Cold War, a Soviet spacecraft crash lands after a mission gone awry, leaving the commander as its only survivor. After a renowned Russian psychologist is brought in to evaluate the commander’s mental state, it becomes clear that something dangerous may have come back to Earth with him…
- 6.5
- 2020
- Released
- 1h 53m

Oksana Akinshina
Tatyana Klimova
Pyotr Fyodorov
Konstantin Veshnyakov
Anton Vasilyev
Yan Rigel
Aleksey Demidov
Kirill Averchenko
Anna Nazarova
Nurse
Albrecht Sander
Convict Seryj
Vitaliya Kornienko
Child in Orphanage
Vasily Zotov
Biologist
Aleksandr Marushev
Prisoner Ruben
Shamil Mukhamedov
Adjutant of Semiradov
Ruslan Dzhaybekov
Physiotherapist
Vitaly Kondrashov
Averchenko's Understudy
Irina Byakova
Nanny
Grigory Melikbekyan
Herdsman
Andrey Shvornev
Speaker
Oleg Makhin
Veshnyakov's Son
Andrey Smiryonnov
Ensign
Nikolay Starodubtsev
Soldier
Natalya Shvets

Pavel Ustinov
Convoy

Released
ru
$2,600,000.00
$354,023.00
- #spacecraft
- #alien life-form
- #alien
- #murder
- #doctor
- #cosmonaut
- #spacecraft accident
- #alien creature
- #symbiotic
- #based on short film
Reviews
Wow. There is a lot to praise here. The cinematography, score, and writing are all excellent. The acting is very strong, from Oksana Akinshina (who hasn't changed a bit since playing a minor but important role in The Bourne Supremacy) to Pyotr Fyodorov, nearly the entire cast is excellent. 4 out of 5 mainly because I have no benchmark. Hope to see more excellent films like this from Russia in t

If you watched the excellent "Life" sci-fi horror thriller, this is its spiritual sequel. A cosmonaut returns with an alien life form in this slow-burn Russian export.

Egor Abramenko's movie puts the characters in perilous situations where no answer seems like the right answer, leaving you wanting to know what happens next, and keeping the audience engaged. Although it doesn't reinvent the wheel, 'Sputnik' is an effective monster flick that touches upon human nature and the moral choices people have to make when it comes to life and death. - Jake Watt Read J
There's a genuine sense of creeping biological dread in "The Sputnik". Obviously, the immediate point of gravity for this film is Ridley Scotts 1979 film "Alien". Let me start by saying the resemblance is only superifcal. This is very much its own film. Unlike "Alien" that ramps up the pace as the terror increases, The Sputnik is a slow burn sci fi. Yes, its an alien monster mash up but utlima











