Name | Role/Job | Order of appearance | Options | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1) | Alan Rickman | 1 | ||
2) | Greta Scacchi | 2 | ||
3) | Ian McKellen | 3 | ||
4) | David Warner | 4 | ||
5) | John Wood | 5 | ||
6) | James Frain | 6 | ||
7) | Ian Hogg | 7 | ||
8) | Sheila Ruskin | 8 | ||
9) | Peter Jeffrey | 9 | ||
10) | Freddie Findlay | 10 | ||
11) | Julian Curry | 11 | ||
12) | László Áron | 12 | ||
13) | János Bata | 13 | ||
14) | István Bicskei | 14 | ||
15) | John Cater | 15 |
Name | Role/Job | Order of appearance | Options | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1) | Peter Pruce | Writer | 1 |
Name | Role/Job | Order of appearance | Options | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1) | Uli Edel | Director | 1 |
Name | Role/Job | Order of appearance | Options | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1) | Nick Gillott | 2 |
Name | Role/Job | Order of appearance | Options | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1) | Brad Fiedel | 2 |
Name | Synopses | Official ? | Options |
---|---|---|---|
Asma Hamed | The tale of the infamous mad monk Rasputin who worms his way into the court of Czar Nicholas II by claiming to be able to heal the Czar's son. But Rasputin's presence in the Czar's court proves to be one more strike against the Czar in the eyes of his subjects and the aristocracy. 281 |
Name | Review Content | Spoiler ? | Official ? | Options |
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