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- Before the vastness of the Siberian Taiga, at the shores of the frozen Lake Baikal, a Parisian executive fleeing from the city, will find everything he has ever dreamed of: to profoundly experience the silence, the solitude and the space.
- Water and ice are shown around the world, in all of their many powerful forms.
- At the shores of the glacial Lake Baikal, Sylvain Tesson, the Parisian adventurer, spent half a year in a weather-battered cabin, alone against the all-powerful elements of nature. Could that be the recipe for happiness?
- Mourning his boyfriend Frédéric's death from an overdose, the French filmmaker David Teboul goes to Siberia on a ritual journey. Out here, under the enormous dome of the skies, he finds the free space to disentangle his thoughts again.
- A witty examination of life and culture in Siberia.
- Epic about Cossacks in the Siberian province of Dauria. Cossacks are living in their village like one big family under the guidance of a strong leader - Ataman.
- Young man with the video camera went to the place of UFO disaster near Baikal lake. He wants to look on destroyed spaceship and don't understand that this trip is very dangerous.
- Award-winning documentary series, 7 one-hour episodes
- A glimpse of a world at the dawn of a pandemic: from the somber desolation of Chernobyl's ruins to Tibet's untouched majestic mountains, Siberia's glacial grounds and Mongolia's snowy desert dunes.
- The feeling of freedom can make you full when you're on the road. This short film, shot on Iphone 5, shows reality of moving on the road. This is a road movie without any action. Just moving, only road. Directed by Victoria Butakova, 2013. It was shot in Russia (lake Baikal) and in England (Oxford) in the summer 2013.
- Referred to as "The Blue Heart of Siberia", Lake Baikal is the deepest lake on Earth, it magically lures different cultures to coexist and fuse peacefully within its realm of mind-blowing beauty. We set out to capture the essence of this unique area in the exquisite new documentary film "Baikal" directed by Alexander Dukhon. Baikal's filming commenced in February 2013 with eight adventurous film crew members embarking on a grueling ten-day trip through the Lake Baikal region. Located in central Asia, it was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1996, and also contains approximately twenty percent of the globe's unfrozen fresh surface water. The shoot took place in just seven days in extreme weather conditions of minus thirty degrees Celsius with few sunlight hours over the short winter days. The team made their way along the lake's western coast, visiting Olkhon Island and Ulan-Ude, the capital of the Republic of Buryatia in Russia. Beautiful soundtrack and powerful sound design reflect the eerie atmosphere of Lake Baikal's land and spirit. The film warmly depicts the human element in a sub-zero and unearthly landscape by sharing endearing stories of the local people whose hearts belong to it.
- A girl goes to the lake Baikal to take part in a shamanistic ritual. It is a long way to yourself.
- Although merely 3% of water on earth, fresh water plays an important part in the planet's weather and erosion. It is immensely important for all non-marine wildlife, which drinks fresh water and swims, procreates, hunts in it. Its concentrations, such as rivers, lakes and swamps, abound in aquatic and other species, often adapted to 'wet' life.
- David Attenborough reveals the extraordinary variety of animal life that live both in or close to or otherwise depend on freshwater focusing principally on the Amazon river and other global freshwater expanses.
- Episode: (2021)2021– 32mTV EpisodeBilly Porter as Fairy Godmother vs. Georgy Millyar as Baba Yaga. How did the Decembrists live at the end of exile? Carey Mulligan's hopeful revenge, and where does the cancelled of famous people? And the main question - red or blue pill?
- The traveler's second leg of his journey across Russia takes him from south-east Siberia to the far south west and the majestic Caucasus Mountains. Along the way he stops off at the oldest lake on earth, witnesses a commemoration of the Second World War in the city of Irkutsk and visits a cafe where patriotic staff and punters perform a daily rendition of the national anthem. He also finds out how the collapse of communism has seen millions of disenchanted Russians join new sects and religions, with one community worshiping a man claiming to be the reincarnation of Christ.
- 1995–TV EpisodeTo the Buryats, the native people of Central Siberia, the "Baygal nuur" or the "rich lake", is a magical place, the cradle and soul of their people. The rest of the world simply sees Lake Baikal as a most magnificent body of water. Located in the heart of Siberia, on Russia's south-eastern border with Mongolia, it holds one fifth of all the liquid freshwater reserves on Earth. Baikal is the deepest and oldest lake in the world, its expanse of water covering a region larger than Belgium. To biologists, the Baikal region is the Galapagos archipelago of Russia, one of the most species-rich freshwater biotopes on our planet. When Russians speak of the "Osero Baikal", they mean the "great Siberian lake" which extends over a surface area of 31,722 km² at an altitude of 455 m between the south Siberian mountain ranges along Russia's south-eastern border with Mongolia. At 25 million years old and a depth of 1642 meters, it is both the oldest and the deepest lake on Earth, and stretches for 673 km from the south-west to the north-west, measuring 82 km at its widest point.