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1-26 of 26
- Video game based on the 2013 film with third person shooter four-player cooperative combat against large numbers of zombies.
- The exiled settler Alexander Ilyin persuades the goldmines owner Trifon Perfilyev to sponsor the expedition dedicated to the searches of "Sannikov Land", a legendary warm land behind the Polar circle.
- Set in the wilderness of the Kamchatka Peninsula, the land of legends and the kingdom of wild brown bears, we follow the daily adventures of five wild brown bears.
- Seven months of filming brown bear cubs life resulted in a movie that allows to plunge into the beauty of wild nature, and experience a boundary, beyond which a man should not interfere.
- Sockeye, a species of wild salmon, is born in Kamchatkan waters and spends its entire life in the Pacific Ocean. Only once does it return to fresh waters - to give offspring, start the circle of life, and die. It is an inexhaustible resource that feeds billions of people on the planet, restored every year. But soon, we may find ourselves facing the unimaginable: humans will exhaust the inexhaustible.
- TV SeriesIn the mid-90s, when the death penalty was still allowed, a new employee appeared in the special purpose prison. Like his colleagues, Kostya will have to carry out death sentences. But he has a special view of justice. Having met the father of one of the victims, Kostya understands that it is those close to him who have the right to carry out the punishment. In addition, you can make good money from this. For example, they never dreamed of the kind of money that a mother offered for the murder of her daughter's rapist.
- The Great Summits is a NHK documentary series that explores ten of the world's most famed mountains. Guided by expert climbers, viewers can experience what it feels like to climb these mountains.
- Document of a 2014 Bering Sea journey following the paths of previous explorers such as Adelbert Von Chamisso. Landscape, flora and fauna are observed, local residents who subsist off the land and sea are encountered along the way.
- TV SeriesAndrey, a journalist with great ambitions, approaches his fortieth birthday as a financial and emotional bankrupt. A meeting with young Sasha, nicknamed Ugolyok, an unusual fashion model with burnt skin, gives him a chance to start over from scratch. He writes an article about the fate of Ugolyok, which causes a wide public outcry. Andrey goes to Sasha's homeland, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, to investigate other facts from her past. Andrey has to do hard work to uncover the truth and bring it to his readers. Sasha helps him pass this test, who, despite severe childhood trauma, is able to lead him out of the impasse in life.
- Documentary that scrutinizes the motivations and arguments for grizzly bear hunting, while dispelling the myth of the dangerous and ferocious grizzly bear.
- Travel documentary series portraying 10 Danes on adventure in 10 different parts of the world.
- 11 time zones lie between Moscow and the outpost of the Russian giant empire. The Kamchatka peninsula resembles a gigantic powder keg at the eastern end of the world. On the island between the Bering Sea in the west and the Sea of Okhotsk in the east, more than 160 volcanoes, countless geyser valleys and sulphur lakes on almost 370,000 square kilometres mark the visible framework for a phenomenon that geoscientists call the heart of the "Pacific Ring of Fire". For over two million years, tectonic forces have been pushing the Pacific Plate under the edge of Eurasia by 10 centimetres every year. The result: earthquakes and volcanic eruptions shake the 1,200 kilometre long peninsula almost daily. An inferno that Kamchatka's natives have feared for almost 14,000 years as the "gateway to hell". The fishermen and reindeer herders of the Ewenen, Korjaken and Itelmen live in harmony with the elements. Almost nothing was known of all this until 1991. The Russians hermetically sealed off the peninsula mainly because of its mineral resources. During the Cold War it was a military restricted area. In the bay in front of the capital Petropavlovsk-Kamchatskji lay the nuclear-powered submarine fleet of the Soviet Navy. It was not until the political thaw at the beginning of the 1990s that the Iron Curtain fell. Geoscientists and ethnologists are now gradually discovering an almost untouched paradise whose uniqueness has been protected since 1996 by UNESCO in cooperation with local nature park administrations in six large reserves on a total of 3.32 million hectares as a world natural heritage site.
- 1997–8.4 (16)TV EpisodeThe Emmy-winning Living Edens Kamchatka follows the lives of family of Grizzly Bearsa mother and three cubs-- as well a variety of animals living on two of Russias most remote Siberian outpoststhe Kamchatka Peninsula and Bering Island. Part of the Ring of Fire, the Kamchatka Peninsula has more than 300 volcanoes, twenty nine of which are active, as well as a high concentration of spectacular wildlife such as giant grizzly bears, Stellers Sea Eagles, Arctic Foxes, Snow Sheep, and rivers engorged with salmon. Off of Bering Island, 500-pound Northern Fur seals dive to depths of six hundred feet and gather on giant rookeries where males fight it out to gain territories in order to secure females and raise their young, Tufted Puffins nest and gather in the millions, and Arctic Foxes patrol the seal rookeries looking for unwary seal pups. Likened to Alaska as Alaska was 100 years ago, Kamchatka hosts some of the most spectacular wildlife displays on Earth and is truly a Siberian Eden.
- Asia is the largest and most extreme continent on Earth. The animals here live in the hottest deserts, tallest jungles and highest mountains in the world, but global warming and deforestation threaten many species including the orangutan.
- Documentary about Charlie Russell, who believes that grizzly bears are not dangerous and that our unnecessary fear of them is driving them to extinction.
- A look at how without volcanoes, there would be no life on Earth. Although destructive, magma from the planet's molten core builds land, and mineral-rich ash from eruptions fertilises the surface.
- 2020–202330mTV Episode
- Simon Reeve embarks on the first leg of a three-part journey across Russia. He sets out amongst the volcanoes of Kamchatka and meets indigenous reindeer herders.
- 1995–TV Episode11 time zones lie between Moscow and the outpost of the Russian giant empire. The Kamchatka peninsula resembles a gigantic powder keg at the eastern end of the world. On the island between the Bering Sea in the west and the Sea of Okhotsk in the east, more than 160 volcanoes, countless geyser valleys and sulphur lakes on almost 370,000 square kilometres mark the visible framework for a phenomenon that geoscientists call the heart of the "Pacific Ring of Fire". For over two million years, tectonic forces have been pushing the Pacific Plate under the edge of Eurasia by 10 centimetres every year. The result: earthquakes and volcanic eruptions shake the 1,200 kilometre long peninsula almost daily. An inferno that Kamchatka's natives have feared for almost 14,000 years as the "gateway to hell". The fishermen and reindeer herders of the Ewenen, Korjaken and Itelmen live in harmony with the elements. Almost nothing was known of all this until 1991. The Russians hermetically sealed off the peninsula mainly because of its mineral resources. During the Cold War it was a military restricted area. In the bay in front of the capital Petropavlovsk-Kamchatskji lay the nuclear-powered submarine fleet of the Soviet Navy. It was not until the political thaw at the beginning of the 1990s that the Iron Curtain fell. Geoscientists and ethnologists are now gradually discovering an almost untouched paradise whose uniqueness has been protected since 1996 by UNESCO in cooperation with local nature park administrations in six large reserves on a total of 3.32 million hectares as a world natural heritage site.
- Over 160 volcanoes, turquoise sulphur lakes, towering geysers and a breathtaking landscape: we are on Kamchatka. The peninsula at the edge of the Bering Strait was considered inaccessible until a few years ago: a military restricted area. At this end of the world the natives still live today in the volcanic valleys and expanses of the tundra from reindeer husbandry and believe in the gods of the shamans. A journey to the eastern end of the world.