{"id":4739,"date":"2020-04-21T18:06:52","date_gmt":"2020-04-21T22:06:52","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/34.224.84.218\/?post_type=movies&p=4739"},"modified":"2021-12-20T22:53:14","modified_gmt":"2021-12-21T03:53:14","slug":"a-visitor-to-a-museum-1989","status":"publish","type":"movies","link":"https:\/\/russianfilmhub.com\/movies\/a-visitor-to-a-museum-1989\/","title":{"rendered":"A Visitor to a Museum"},"content":{"rendered":"
A Visitor to a Museum<\/em> is a 1989 film directed by Konstantin Lopushansky<\/a>. Like his earlier 1986 work, Dead Man\u2019s Letters<\/a><\/em>, it explores what a post-apocalyptic world would look like and how humans search for truth and meaning.\u00a0<\/p>\n While in Dead Man’s Letters<\/em>, Lopushansky tinted the background yellow, in A Visitor to a Museum<\/em>, the background has a read tint. A such, these two movies are often labelled Lopushansky’s “yellow” and “red” movies respectively. Both movies conjure up amazing shots that you’ll remember for years. But, anyway, more on A Visitor to a Museum’s\u00a0<\/em>plot.<\/p>\n An ambiguous tale, this movie takes place in a world ruined by some sort of ecological disaster. Meanwhile, a large share of humans consist of deformed mutants. The protagonist of the film is a man who remains the human appearance and way of thinking as we know it. He is on a journey to visit a flooded museum. For one week a year, the tides shift such that one can walk along the ocean floor to visit this site. And so, he goes there in search of a portal he believes leads to another world.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":4745,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","template":"","tags":[10,2259,2576],"genres":[306,2857,806],"dtquality":[],"dtcast":[2761,460,2760,2759,2162],"dtdirector":[2758],"dtyear":[66],"yoast_head":"\n