The Three Bogatyrs

The Three Bogatyrs - Три богатыря
Created byMelnitsa Animation Studio
Films and television
Film(s)
  • Three Heroes and Horse Julius on the Throne (2021)
    Три богатыря и Конь на троне (2021)
  • Three Heroes and the Navel of the Earth (2023)
    Три богатыря и Пуп Земли (2023)
  • Three Heroes: Not a Day Without a Feat (2024)
    Три богатыря. Ни дня без подвига (2024)
  • Three Heroes: Not a Day Without a Feat 2 (2025)
    Три богатыря. Ни дня без подвига 2 (2025)
  • Three Heroes and the Light is a Wedge (2025)
    Три богатыря и свет клином (2025)

The Three Bogatyrs (Russian:Три богатыря) is a Russian animated franchise produced by Melnitsa Animation Studio. The films feature the voices of Sergey Makovetsky, Dimitry Vysotsky, Liya Medvedeva, Valery Soloviev, Oleg Kulikovich, Oleg Tabakov, Anatoly Petrov, Andrei Tolubeyev, and Fyodor Bondarchuk with Elizaveta Boyarskaya. The overarching plot throughout the series follows the adventures of three bogatyrs: Alyosha Popovich, Dobrynya Nikitich and Ilya Muromets.

The series grossed over $135 million, making it the highest grossing Russian animated film and rendering it one of the most profitable Russian films in the last 10 years.

This animated film is anachronistic, following the lead of the other films in this series. Set in medieval times, this film combines the history of the Kievan Rus, Slavic, and Russian folklore with more modern elements including a nod to Alexander Pushkin and video games. Each of the first three films featured one of the bogatyrs which were Russian epic heroes, based very loosely on the heroes in the legends about Prince Vladimir in the Kievan-Rus' bylina cycle, a collection of traditional Russian oral epic narrative poems. The fourth film, The Three Bogatyrs, and the Shamakhan Queen, unites all three of the bogatyrs, Alyosha Popovich, Ilya Muromets, and Dobrynya Nikitych, in one film and includes sidekicks such as Julius the talking horse, introduced in the previous films. Unlike the other three animated features, this film also makes reference to the Russian literature from the 19th century and the famous narrative epic of Alexander Pushkin: The Tale of the Golden Cockerel (Сказка о золотом петушке, 1834) with the addition of the Shamakhan Queen.

The commercial success of this series has been increasing since the release of the first film in 2004, because of such marketing.