There are 52 films with the same actors, 68833 with the same cinematographic genres (including 8 with exactly the same 4 genres than The Delegation), to have finally 70 suggestions of similar films.
If you liked The Delegation, you will probably like those similar films :
, 1h28 Directed byKaren Shakhnazarov GenresDrama, Comedy, Romance ActorsOleg Basilashvili, Inna Tchourikova, Vladimir Valentinovich Menshov, Vera Sotnikova Rating77% Ivan Miroshnikov, а 17-year-old high school graduate, fails to enter university and gets fixed up with a job as a courier (delivery person) in a small publishing company. At the same his parents get divorced. His ironic and careless attitude to his new miserable job covers the deep confusion of his soul. By pure accident he meets a girl named Katya, daughter of a famous professor. She is bored with her perfect family and ordinary prosperity, and they start dating. But her sudden interest gradually fades away because she doesn't have enough strength for deliberate protest and Ivan, truthfully, is not particularly interested in her. Soon she returns to her old environment, and he stays face-to-face with his nearest future.
, 1h32 Directed byPiotr Todorovski OriginRussie GenresDrama, Romance ActorsNikolai Petrovich Burlyayev, Natalya Andrejchenko, Inna Tchourikova, Zinovi Gerdt Rating71% Sasha is a former Red Army soldier married to a teacher and attending a university. He also works as a motion picture operator at a local theatre. One winter day he meets a gruffish woman street vendor with a child. Sasha recognizes her to be Lyuba, a former military nurse he worshipped during the war. He starts dating her and looking after her child. After learning about their affair, Sasha's wife invites Lyuba to their kommunalka and throws a little party for the lovers.
, 1h43 Directed byPavel Lounguine OriginRussie GenresDrama, Comedy, Romance ActorsConstantin Khabenski, Sergueï Garmach, Marina Golub, Leonid Kanevsky, Esther Gorintin, Otto Tausig Rating60% Young con artist with a rather nice personality, Edik (Konstantin Khabensky) gets in trouble gathering long lost foreign relatives together. Wealthy and middle-class émigrés who have made it in the new lands (the Americas, Israel) return to the homeland, to the roots from which they were severed. The implicit motivation for their return is the search for spiritual nourishment, and so the émigrés sacrifice the material comforts of their villas and Western civilization to journey to their ancestral past, the timeless village of Golotvin. They believe that here they will be able to complete themselves by reconnecting with their heritage. All for the nominal fee of Edik, a free agent and a small time crook who orchestrates an elaborate crime with the intention of earning a pile of money by tricking a group of pilgrims into thinking that a small village is their homeland and its inhabitants are their long lost relatives. The levels of deception multiply quickly.