Russian mafia in popular culture
Appearance
The Russian mafia has frequently been a subject of works in popular culture.
Anime and manga
- The Japanese manga and anime series Black Lagoon prominently features the Hotel Moscow which is a branch of the Russian mafia that operates in the Thailand city of Roanapur.
- Two characters in the Japanese light novel series Durarara!!, Simon Brezhnev and Dennis, are former Russian mafia members who run a sushi shop in Tokyo.
- The Russian mafia appears as a rival to the Yakuza in the manga Sanctuary.
Comics
- A Russian crime syndicate known as the Tracksuit Mafia appears in Hawkeye and The Superior Spider-Man comic books.
- Russian mafioso are frequent antagonists in The Punisher.
- The Russian mafia play a large part in The Winter Men.
Film
- The main plotline in Assa (1988) takes place in Yalta during the winter of 1980 and follows a crime boss' young mistress who falls in love with an underground rock musician.
- In the joint Russian-American produced comedy Weather Is Good on Deribasovskaya, It Rains Again on Brighton Beach (1992), KGB and CIA agents must work together to bring down the head of the Russian mafia who is putting at risk high-level diplomatic talks between the President of the United States and the General Secretary of the Soviet Union.
- The Russian-Jewish mafia of Brooklyn is the subject of Little Odessa (1994).
- The character Valentin Dmitrovich Zukovsky (played by Robbie Coltrane), an ex-KGB agent-turned-Russian mafia head, appears in the James Bond films GoldenEye (1995) and The World Is Not Enough (1999).
- The antagonists in Fair Game (1995) are a crime group made up of rogue KGB operatives.
- The antagonist conspires to sell a thousand electronic pulse rifles to Sergei Petrovsky, a Russian mafia boss in Eraser (1996).
- In Maximum Risk (1996), the protagonist discovers that he had a twin brother who was in the Russian mafia and sets out to avenge his death at the hands of Russian mobsters.
- The Russian cult film Brother (1997) tells a story of a young mobster with a strong sense of loyalty in the 1990s St. Petersburg.
- The film Jungle 2 Jungle (1997) features a Russian mafia in New York City run by Alexei Jovanovic (played by David Ogden Stiers).
- In The Jackal (1997), a Russian mob boss hires the titular assassin to avenge the death of his brother.
- The Russian mafia are major antagonists in Ronin (1998), seeking the mysterious briefcase from an IRA splinter group in France.
- The film Rounders (1998) prominently features members of the Russian mafia.
- A Boston-based Russian mafia clan appears in The Boondock Saints (1999).
- The documentary film The Making of a New Empire (1999) follows Moscow-based Chechen mafia boss Khozh-Ahmed Noukhayev.
- Brother 2 (2000), the sequel to Brother (1997), takes place in Moscow and the United States.
- The Mark of Cain (2000) is a documentary on Russian criminal tattoos.
- Snatch (2000) features Serbian actor Rade Šerbedžija as Boris "The Blade" Yurinov aka Boris the Bullet Dodger, an ex-KGB ethnic Russian Uzbek criminal and arms-dealer operating in London's underworld.
- In the film Training Day (2001), Denzel Washington's character Alonzo Harris is trying to pay a ransom of money for his life after he assaulted a member of the Russian mafia in Las Vegas and took his money. His bosses known as the "Three Wise Men" state how they know that he owes money to the Russian mafia and suggest that he leaves town. In an attempt to escape via Los Angeles International Airport after being thwarted by his partner Jake Hoyt, Alonzo is killed by some Russian mafia operatives in the airport parking lot and the broadcast of his death over the news is hauntingly similar to the one he used to taunt Jake.
- The protagonist of 25th Hour (2002) is associated with the Russian mafia in New York City, despite being of Irish descent himself.
- The film Half Past Dead (2002) has a Russian car thief as the main character.
- The Russian film Tycoon (2002) shows the rise of a Russian oligarch from the Gorbachev era in the late '80s, to absolute power in the Yeltsin era in the '90s.
- The Russian cult B-film Antikiller (2002) shows the mafia hierarchy of the 1990s rather faithfully. It spawned two sequels, none of which repeated the success of the first film.
- Russian gangsters distributing ecstasy in Miami on behalf of a Cuban drug lord appear in Bad Boys II (2003).
- The Russian film Bimmer (2003) is road movie about four friends who get into trouble with the law and flee Moscow in a black BMW. As the men drive across the Russian expanse, they encounter corruption, violence, poverty, and various situations characterizing the bleakness and challenges of small-town life in post-Soviet Russia. A sequel was released in 2006.[citation needed]
- The Russian film Dead Man's Bluff (2005) is a dark comedy portraying young mobsters in the 1990s Nizhny Novgorod.
- Russian mobsters operating from Brighton Beach feature briefly early in Lord of War (2005). The film tells the story of Ukrainian-American arms trafficker Yuri Orlov (played by Nicolas Cage, and based on Viktor Bout) who also illegally acquires guns and tanks from his uncle, a former Soviet general.
- The film Eastern Promises (2007), subject of which is the Russian mafia in London.
- We Own the Night (2007) is centered around a manager of a Brighton Beach night club which is owned by the Russian mafia.
- In Batman: Gotham Knight (2008), the Russian Mob is depicted as being rivals of Sal Maroni's crime family and are led by Yuri "The Russian" Dimitrov (voiced by Corey Burton).
- RocknRolla (2008) features Russian oligarchs and Chechen gangsters operating in London.
- Thieves by Law (2010) is a documentary film charting the rise of Russian organized crime in the wake of the fall of the Soviet Union.
- One in the Chamber (2012) involves warring former Soviet gangsters in the Czech Republic with the Russian Suverov crime family rivaling the Armenian mafia Tavanian crime family.
- The Russian film "Break loose" (2014) [1] (original title was «Восьмёрка», named after Lada Samara one of the characters is driving) depicts a personal conflict between young OMON operatives and a local crime boss, few days before New Year's Eve 1999-2000. Almost everybody wants to settle the matter peacefully and let it pass, but a romantic interest of young OMON operative draws them all beyond the point of no return. Unbeknownst to the protagonists, president Yeltsin is preparing his resignation speech and Russia is about to enter a new era.
- The protagonist in the Brooklyn-set film The Drop (2014) has his bar taken over by Chechen mobsters.
- The 2014 film adaptation of The Equalizer (which was directed by the same director of Training Day and also starring Denzel Washington) features the Russian mafia as the primary antagonists where they were led by Vladimir Pushkin (played by Vladimir Kulich).
- The protagonist of John Wick (2014) goes to war with the Russian mafia after the boss' son steals his vintage muscle car and kills his dog.
- Our Kind of Traitor (2016) is a British spy thriller film adapted from John le Carré's novel of the same name.
- Red Sparrow (2018) is a spy thriller film involving a seductress working for the Russian Mafia named Dominika Egorova based on a book by Jason Matthews of the same name.
- Indiana Jones’s main adversaries from Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008) named Irina Spalko and Antonin Dovchenko are Russian mobsters.
- Ivan Drago, his manager, and his trainers from Rocky IV (1985) are members of a Russian organized crime syndicate.
- The 2010 musical adaptation of Matilda featured a member of the Russian Mafia named Sergei as well as his underlings.
- The Spy Next Door (2010) features Russian mobsters as antagonists and they are led by a crime boss named Anton Poldark.
Literature
- The Pyramid. The Soviet Mafia, a 1990 novel by Telman Gdlyan and Evgeny Dodolev.
- Russian and, even more prominently, Chechen mafia appear in Martin Cruz Smith's 1992 crime novel Red Square.
- A 1995 novel "No time for Heroes" by Brian Freemantle features a conspiracy by Russian mafia.
- Since 1998, Russian publishing house "Eksmo" has been printing crime novels under the series "I am a thief by law" («Я-вор в законе»).
- The Russian mafia serve as antagonists in Eoin Colfer's Artemis Fowl: The Arctic Incident (2002), with protagonist Artemis Fowl II trying to rescue his father, a former Irish crime lord, after he is kidnapped by Russian gangsters near Murmansk.
- Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell (2004) and Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell: Operation Barracuda (2005) involve a Russia and Ukraine-based terrorist arms dealing organization named "The Shop", headed by Andrei Zdrok.
- Our Kind of Traitor, a 2010 novel by John le Carré.
- In 2013, Alexei Sherstobitov wrote an autobiography called "The Liquidator" («Ликвидатор»), detailing his life as a hitman for the Russian mafia.
- Paul-Henri Guiter, L'Étoile noire, un aventurier au cœur de la Russie souterraine, Arthaud Edition ISBN 978-2-0813-7600-7, Paris, France, 2017, an autobiographical novel in the Russian mafia.
Television
- The Solntsevskaya Bratva has a recurring role in the CW TV series Arrow. Oliver Queen has contacts in the organization who he uses to locate criminals.
- The popular Russian TV mini-series Brigada, aired in 2002, depicted a group of underdogs rising the crime ladder to become oligarchs in the 1990s Moscow.
- The TV series Gotham features Russian mafia family formerly allied to Sicilian gangster Carmine Falcone. They later turns against him with the alliance of Fish Mooney and her gang. The Russian mafia was first led by Nikolai (played by Jeremy Davidson) until he was killed by Oswald Cobblepot during a raid orchestrated by rival Italian Mob boss Sal Maroni. In the episode "Harvey Dent," the rest of the Russian mafia was led by Gregor Kasyanov where they spring explosives expert Ian Hargrove from a prison transport to construct bombs for them. The mobsters target a cache of Falcone's money, but are stopped by the police. During a standoff with the Gotham City Police Department, Gregor and some of the Russian mafia operatives are nearly killed by a bomb that Butch Gilzean set off on Fish Mooney's behalf in order to destroy the money and hurt Falcone.
- The final episodes of the Law & Order Season 9 (1998–99) center around the Russian mafia in Manhattan and their attempts to sabotage prosecution.
- In the Netflix prison seriesOrange Is the New Black, Galina "Red" Reznikova (played by Kate Mulgrew) is in the prison for her involvement with the Russian mafia in Queens.
- In the HBO Series Oz, the Russian mafia was represented by Jewish-Russian Mafia member Nikolai Stanislofsky and by Cossack hitman Yuri Kosygin. Kosygin is described in the show as "the most ruthless hitman in Little Odessa".
- The FX series Sons of Anarchy portrays illegal gun trading with the Russian Mob.
- In The Sopranos, there were many references and interactions with the Russian mafia.
- The Brighton Beach-based Yogorov crime family appears in the first three seasons of Person of Interest.
- Bordertown from Netflix is a Finish series that has one of the main characters as a former Bratva member.
- The TNT series Claws portrays the main characters becoming involved with the Russian mafia in central Florida.
Video games
- The Russian mafia appears in multiple Grand Theft Auto games:
- The Russian mafia appears in Grand Theft Auto 2 (1999).
- Also in Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas (2004) one of the missions involves Big Smoke taking CJ down to a Hotel in Los Santos where they meet up with a group of Russian mobsters.
- In the Grand Theft Auto IV (2008) video game, the main protagonist is allied with and later rivals against a Russian mafia gang.
- The main antagonist in Hitman 2: Silent Assassin (2002) is a Russian crime lord named Sergei Zavorotko.
- A Russian black market arms trading syndicate known as the Zemy appears in the first mission of SOCOM: U.S. Navy SEALs (2002).
- Antikiller is a licensed PC game based on the eponymous gangster movie.[2] It came out in 2005 (Russian market) and 2007 (international market), respectively.[3]
- Mercenaries: Playground of Destruction (2005) features the North Korea branch of a Moscow-based Russian mafia group, led by Sergei Voronov before he is usurped by Josef Yurinov, which engages in war profiteering and black market arms dealing.
- The SWAT 4 (2005) expansion pack SWAT 4: The Stechkov Syndicate includes seven new missions featuring the fictional Stetchkov crime family.
- A London-based Russian mafia group called the Zahharov Organization, led by Vladislav Zakharov, is one of five playable gangs in Gangs of London (2006).
- One of three gangs in Crackdown (2007) is the Volk (Russian for "Wolf"), which is made up of former soldiers from Eastern Europe.
- The Hotline Miami games prominently feature the Russian mafia.
- Hotline Miami (2012) features the Russian mafia as a group of antagonists, as well as the primary enemies.
- Hotline Miami 2: Wrong Number features the Russian mafia as the main protagonist faction of the second half of the game.
- In the espionage RPG Alpha Protocol (2010), the protagonist must navigate a conflict between two rival Moscow organized crime groups, one of which is allied with the corrupt defense contractor the protagonist opposes.
- The San Francisco-based bratva, an offshoot of the Brighton Beach mafia, appears in Watch Dogs 2 (2016), hiding within the city's Jewish population and undertake massive laundering operations and human trafficking schemes.
- Russian mafia is featured in 2003 video game RoadKill, which is known as the "Dreg Lords". They drive garbage trucks, wearing bodypaints and are one of the player's enemies in later parts of the game.
References
- ^ IMDb https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2962872/
- ^ PC Gamer http://www.pcgamer.com/saturday-crapshoot-antikiller/
- ^ Absolute Games (in Russian) http://www.ag.ru/games/antikiller