the Valley of the Dead
Russian Life|March/April 2021
On the Trail of a Russian Movie Star
Philipp Lausberg
the Valley of the Dead
The Karmadon Gorge and neighboring realms are stunningly beautiful, yet also wrapped in mystery and tragedy. They contain an ancient “city of the dead,” Soviet modernist relics, and the final resting place of Russia’s biggest movie star of the 1990s.

In a vast, half-abandoned valley, amid the imposing Caucasus mountains, there is a monument marking the presumed location where Russia’s biggest movie star of the 1990s perished. A simple marble plate on a rock and the figure of a grieving mother commemorate Sergei Bodrov, Jr. and his film crew, all of whom died here on September 20, 2002.

At around 8:08 pm that day, a 150-meter-thick chunk of the Kolka Glacier, situated on the northern slope of the 5050-meter-high Mount Kazbek, barrelled 32 kilometers down the Karmadon Gorge. Travelling at over 100 kilometers per hour, the avalanche buried several villages and 125 people under a 100-meter-deep outflow of ice, mud and debris. Among them were a 42-member film crew with Sergei Bodrov, Jr., who had come here to direct a new movie. The 30-year-old was at the peak of his popularity, having become a symbol of the new post-Soviet Russia as the main character of the Brother (EPAM) films.

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