It is a story of a several-week-long military duty in September 2014. A group of military volunteers comes to Donetsk Airport for the first time - the Airport has been held by Ukrainians for... Read allIt is a story of a several-week-long military duty in September 2014. A group of military volunteers comes to Donetsk Airport for the first time - the Airport has been held by Ukrainians for more than four months of war.It is a story of a several-week-long military duty in September 2014. A group of military volunteers comes to Donetsk Airport for the first time - the Airport has been held by Ukrainians for more than four months of war.
- Director
- Writer
- Stars
- Awards
- 7 wins & 6 nominations total
Andrey Isaenko
- Subota
- (as Andriy Isayenko)
Roman Yasinovskiy
- Gid
- (as Roman Yasinovskyy)
Mariia Zanyborshch
- Natalka
- (as Mariya Zanyborshch)
Laptii Oleksandr
- Dozornyy Sentinel
- (as Oleksandr Laptiy)
Aleksandr Timenko
- Feniks
- (as Oleksandr Timenko)
Oleg Drach
- Ofitser shtabu
- (as Oleh Drach)
Aleksandr Sugak
- Desantnyk 1
- (as Oleksandr Suhak)
Dmitriy Saranskov
- Desantnyk 3
- (as Dmytro Saranskov)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
It is the story about the super heroes and in the same time: the tender fathers, loving husbands and faithful sons of their motherland. It is the modern (even current) history of Ukraine. Film is worth seeing for every who likes Ukraine and wants to understand what happens in it.
Brutal war reality, pride and passion. Honor and courage. No name actors but so great drama and play.
Strong film, with thousends of small details, most off all dialogs taking you hart, and severall heavy scines... After wathicin this film, all my company exit from the cinema siently, and we not discuss thiss film, it is realy hard.
Huge congratulation to author, that he involve many real Kiborgs, who helped to reproduce scines and atmosphire!
8agof
Ukrainian and russian are not the same language. And while we can understand each other a lot, especially people who have a rich vocabulary, i still had to use russian subtitles as an aid.
Well, the film has characters speaking to each other in different languages with no translation or language barrier. I love when movies do that. A chunk of ukrainian population actually can't speak ukrainian and that doesn't automatically mean they support putler.
So far the cities that putler carpet bombs are mostly entirely russian-speaking, and just ten days ago the populations were supporting russia and some of them even putler himself. Heck, even the current president couldn't speak ukrainian when he was elected. I consider his victory was partly ensured by him being a compromise candidate and as an act of revanchism from the east leaning part of the population. Well, no division anymore, i doubt ukraine was ever as unified as now in the current borders.
There's a saying, stalin got a country with "sokha" and left (in a puddle of piss) it with an atomic bomb. Well, putler got a country that was leading the whole CIS region, with a ginormous cultural market niche of russian-speakers and economical ties with all neighbours, with local homegrown IT companies that crushed in the local market the world leaders like Google, Amazon, Facebook and others, and he will leave (hopefully on the 6th of march, in a puddle of piss) it norther than korea.
Dunno about translations, that would make all the characters speak the same language, but the original audio is this movie's strength if you speak russian or ukrainian. The cinematography is a bit better than just solid, but this isn't an outright action film. It's more of a war drama and most of the runtime it's about soldiers and volunteers participating in philosophical discussions on the merits of humanity, nation, culture and other relevant stuff. And they do it good. I didn't expect the writing to be this strong and the actors sell it.
All in all, it's kinda a great movie.
Well, the film has characters speaking to each other in different languages with no translation or language barrier. I love when movies do that. A chunk of ukrainian population actually can't speak ukrainian and that doesn't automatically mean they support putler.
So far the cities that putler carpet bombs are mostly entirely russian-speaking, and just ten days ago the populations were supporting russia and some of them even putler himself. Heck, even the current president couldn't speak ukrainian when he was elected. I consider his victory was partly ensured by him being a compromise candidate and as an act of revanchism from the east leaning part of the population. Well, no division anymore, i doubt ukraine was ever as unified as now in the current borders.
There's a saying, stalin got a country with "sokha" and left (in a puddle of piss) it with an atomic bomb. Well, putler got a country that was leading the whole CIS region, with a ginormous cultural market niche of russian-speakers and economical ties with all neighbours, with local homegrown IT companies that crushed in the local market the world leaders like Google, Amazon, Facebook and others, and he will leave (hopefully on the 6th of march, in a puddle of piss) it norther than korea.
Dunno about translations, that would make all the characters speak the same language, but the original audio is this movie's strength if you speak russian or ukrainian. The cinematography is a bit better than just solid, but this isn't an outright action film. It's more of a war drama and most of the runtime it's about soldiers and volunteers participating in philosophical discussions on the merits of humanity, nation, culture and other relevant stuff. And they do it good. I didn't expect the writing to be this strong and the actors sell it.
All in all, it's kinda a great movie.
Because the film is shot on a relatively small budget, then many things can not be fully disclosed because of a lack of money. For example: the battle for the New Terminal and other clashes with the terrorists. As for what does not depend on the big money, this is a story which is very good, and especially the dialogue of the actors is so lively that they deserve 10 points. Operator work in places is lame, but the picture itself is very good. The film makes you think after watching because of its multi-faceted, because in the dialogs you can agree with all the characters in the film. For those who do not know the details of the conflict between Ukrainian troops and terrorists and Russian military, the film may seem unsaid, but you can also watch documentaries on the theme of the Donetsk airport. In the Ukrainian cinematograph this is one of the best records made in the history of independence. I advise you to view it all, very deep dialogues and a story about real Ukrainian heroes.
- How long is Cyborgs: Heroes Never Die?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- Cyborgs: Heroes Never Die
- Filming locations
- Goncharivsky Combined Arms Ground, Chernihivska oblast, Ukraine(Tank battle scenes)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $1,700,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $884,894
- Runtime1 hour 52 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content
Top Gap
By what name was Kiborgy. Heroyi ne vmyrayut (2017) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer