KikoRiki
0 sources
KikoRiki is a television series that encompasses the genres of children's television series, comedy television series, and drama television series . The show also incorporates elements of comedy, satire, and drama fiction .
KikoRiki
Summary
KikoRiki is an animated television series[1]. KikoRiki draws 483 Wikipedia views per month (animated_television_series category, ranking #433 of 2,014).[2]
Key Facts
- KikoRiki is the creator of Anatoly Prokhorov[3].
- KikoRiki is the creator of Salavat Shayhinurov[4].
- KikoRiki is the creator of Igor Shevchuk[5].
- KikoRiki is the creator of Ilya Popov[6].
- KikoRiki's instance of is recorded as animated television series[7].
- KikoRiki was directed by Denis Chernov[8].
- KikoRiki was directed by Konstantin Biryukov[9].
- KikoRiki was directed by Ilya Maksimov[10].
- KikoRiki was directed by Dzhangir Suleymanov[11].
- KikoRiki was directed by Alexey Gorbunov[12].
- KikoRiki was directed by Natalya Mirzoyan[13].
- KikoRiki was directed by Roman Sokolov[14].
- KikoRiki was directed by Alexey Minchenok[15].
- Aleksey Lebedev wrote the screenplay for KikoRiki[16].
- Dmitri Yakovenko wrote the screenplay for KikoRiki[17].
- Svetlana Mardagolimova wrote the screenplay for KikoRiki[18].
- KikoRiki's composer is recorded as Marina Landa[19].
- KikoRiki's composer is recorded as Sergey Vasiliev[20].
- KikoRiki's genre is children's television series[21].
- KikoRiki's genre is comedy television series[22].
- KikoRiki's genre is drama television series[23].
- KikoRiki's genre is comedy[24].
- KikoRiki's genre is satire[25].
- KikoRiki's genre is drama fiction[26].
- KikoRiki's genre is family film[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Producers include Ilya Popov[28] and Aleksandr Gerasimov[29]. Directors include Denis Chernov[8], Konstantin Biryukov[9], Ilya Maksimov[10], Dzhangir Suleymanov[11], Alexey Gorbunov[12], and Natalya Mirzoyan[13]. Screenwriters include Aleksey Lebedev[16], Dmitri Yakovenko[17], and Svetlana Mardagolimova[18]. Created works include Anatoly Prokhorov[3], a film producer[30], 1948–2020[31], of Soviet Union[32], awarded the State Prize of the Russian Federation in Literature and the Arts[33]; Salavat Shayhinurov[4], an animator[34], b. 1970[35], of Soviet Union[36], awarded the State Prize of the Russian Federation[37]; Igor Shevchuk[5], a writer[38], b. 1960[39], of Soviet Union[40]; and Ilya Popov[6], a businessperson[41], b. 1978[42], of Soviet Union[43], awarded the Icarus[44].
Publication
The original language of KikoRiki was Russian[45]. Genres include children's television series[21], comedy television series[22], drama television series[23], comedy[24], satire[25], and drama fiction[26].
Adaptations and Inspiration
KikoRiki followed Kikoriki. Team Invincible[46]. Successors include Kikoriki: Deja Vu[47], Kikoriki. The Legend of the Golden Dragon[48], Kikoriki: PIN-Code[49], Smeshariki. Azbuki[50], and Kikoriki: New Adventures[51].
Why It Matters
KikoRiki draws 483 Wikipedia views per month (animated_television_series category, ranking #433 of 2,014).[2] KikoRiki has Wikipedia articles in 16 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[52] KikoRiki is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[53]