Aleksandr Lukich Ptushko (Russian: Александр Лукич Птушко, 19 April [O.S. 6 April] 1900 – 6 March 1973) was a Soviet animation and fantasy film director, and a People's Artist of the USSR (1969).
Ptushko is frequently (and somewhat misleadingly) referred to as "the Soviet Walt Disney," because of his prominent early role in animation in the Soviet Union, though a more accurate comparison would be to Willis H. O'Brien or Ray Harryhausen. Some critics, such as Tim Lucas and Alan Upchurch, have also compared Ptushko to Italian filmmaker Mario Bava, who made fantasy and horror films with similarities to Ptushko's work and made similarly innovative use of color cinematography and special effects.
He began his film career as a director and animator of stop motion short films, and became a director of feature-length films combining live action, stop motion, creative special effects, and Russian mythology. Along the way he would be responsible for a number of firsts in Russian film history (including the first feature-length animated film, and the first film in color), and would make several extremely popular and internationally praised films full of visual flair and spectacle.
Directing
53
Male
1900-04-19
Lugansk, Lugansk uyezd, Yekaterinoslav Governorate, Russian Empire [now Luhansk, Luhansk Oblast, Ukraine]
Aleksandr Lukich Ptushko, Alfred Posco, A. Ptushko, А. Птушко, Gregg Sebelious, Александр Лукич Птушко
The fairy-tale world of Aleksandr Ptushko
The Incident At The Stadium
Three Encounters
A Tale of Lost Times
The Tale of Tsar Saltan
The Stone Flower
Sadko
Scarlet Sails
The Merry Musicians
The New Gulliver
Ruslan and Ludmila
The Tale of the Fisherman and the Goldfish
The Golden Key
Sampo
Ilya Muromets
The Dog and the Cat
Lord of Life
The Fox and the Wolf
The Giant Turnip
Small But Fierce
My Friend, Kolka!
The Magic Voyage of Sinbad
The Sword and the Dragon
The Day the Earth Froze