Ashik Kerib

Ashik Kerib

6.2 / Rating 44 votes 1988

Wandering minstrel Ashik Kerib falls in love with a rich merchant's daughter, but is spurned by her father and forced to roam the world for a thousand and one nights. Now presumed dead by those he loves, he performs for the poor and unfortunate on his journeys through the wilderness. Parajanov's visually ravishing 'tableaux vivants' tell Lermontov's romantic tale while Turkish and Azerbaijani folk songs transport us into its mystical landscapes.

To download, you must be logged in and purchase a subscription. Login / Register Buy Subscription

1-Month Subscription

71 thousand Toman ۲۰٪ discount
59 thousand Toman
31 day

3-Month Subscription

215 thousand Toman ۲۰٪ discount
179 thousand Toman
90 day

1-Year Subscription

719 thousand Toman ۲۰٪ discount
599 thousand Toman
365 day

No trailer available.

Ashik Kerib, sometimes known internationally as The Lovelorn Minstrel, is a 1988 Soviet art film directed by Dodo Abashidze and Sergei Parajanov that is based on the short story of the same name by Mikhail Lermontov. It was Parajanov's last completed film and was dedicated to his close friend Andrei Tarkovsky, who had died two years previously. The film also features a detailed portrayal of Azerbaijani culture.

Recommended for You