
Boris Shlikhting
Acting
Biography
No biography available for Boris Shlikhting.
Born: November 24, 1890
Place of Birth: Russian Empire
Known For

Nasreddin in Khujand, or the Enchanted Prince
Based on the popular comedy novel, as well as many international anecdotes about Nasreddin Hodja, a witty Muslim traveler.

A Man Changes its Skin
The construction of the Vakhsh Canal, one of the largest new buildings of the first five-year plan, is underway. Two Americans are coming here under contract. A seasoned spy, Colonel Bailey, who introduced himself as the harmless traveler Mr. Murry, would later be caught red-handed and exposed. And Mr. Clark, who came to the "make money" channel, will gradually become convinced that work and politics are not such different concepts. Not accepting socialism, he quite sincerely sympathizes with the enthusiasm of the Soviet people. Love for the translator - Komsomol member Maria Polozova - helps Clark to comprehend what is happening.

Bed and Sofa
Life changes for a Moscow couple after they allow an old friend of the husband’s to move in.

The Three Million Trial
History of theft and double crossing when two thieves fall out over the theft of the money of the proceeds of the sale of a house by a banker to a religious community.

Sniper
During World War 1 a Russian soldier (Pyotr Sobolevsky) serves in Russian Expeditionary Force in France where he is chosen for his marksmanship and trained as a skilled sniper. After the Russian revolution the soldier returns home while his commander (Boris Shlikhting) fights against the Soviet Russia. In 1930 the former soldier works on a factory and also he is the instructor in shooting club. Once the town that is near the Soviet border is attacked by foreign troops (the hostile state isn't named but the uniform of the soldiers resembles Finnish). The character meets againt with his former commander who serves in invading forces.

Professor Mamlock
Made in Stalin’s Soviet Union, Professor Mamlock was one of the first films worldwide to tackle Nazi anti-Semitism openly. Based on a play by a German-Jewish exile in Moscow, Friedrich Wolf, and directed by an Austrian-Jewish exile in Moscow, Herbert Rappaport, the film tells with the story of an apolitical humanitarian Jewish doctor and his politically-aware, fascism-resisting son, an intern, as their lives become entangled with the Nazis’ rise to power in 1930s Germany, where they live and practice. Things come to a head when the Nazi organization takes control of their hospital, and place a rabid antisemitic physician in charge over Mamlock and his staff.

Loss of Feeling
In an unnamed English-speaking capitalist land, a young engineer invents inexhaustible giant robots to replace the fragile human workers on high-volume assembly-lines, and soon finds his invention co-opted by the military-industrial complex.

The Traitor
An agent working for the Tsar fools a group of Bolchevik sailors but is captured and punished after the revolution. Partially lost.

Banda batki Knysha
Silent film set in 1919 during the Russian Civil War. The Red Army liberated a small town, but a unit of White Russians is still operating in the suburbs. A group of Red Army officers are posing as a gang of Batka Knysh to provoke the White Russians before the final blow.

The Girl from Distant River
Filmography
as начальник пристани
as Nachalnik strazhi
as ротмистр
as Magistrate Kepke
as Officer (uncredited)
as Guest at the restaurant (uncredited)
as Captain Shlikhting
as Bill Murray
as Captain Tarkhanov
as Nepman (uncredited)
as Loshadkin, poet
as Dmitriy Orlov / Leon Couturier
as (uncredited)
as Austrian officer (uncredited)
as Lyolka's adjutant
as Souteneur at the brothel (uncredited)
as Chief of the police (uncredited)
as Reporter
as Petrov
as Policeman