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It bombed. Critically mixed. Commercially soft. Two decades later, though, 800 balas refuses to fade away. Its afterlife lives not in restored Blu-rays or prestige streaming services, but in a surprising place: ok.ru, the Russian social network turned accidental digital archive of cult European cinema. 800 balas tells the story of a boy searching for his grandfather — a washed-up stuntman still running a decrepit western-themed amusement park in Almería, the very desert where Leone and Eastwood once carved out legends. It’s a tragicomedy about nostalgia, failure, and the love of fake gunfights. The title refers to the 800 blank cartridges fired daily to keep the illusion alive.
I’m unable to access or browse specific content on ok.ru (including verifying active links, embedded videos, or user-uploaded files for 800 balas from 2002). My knowledge and real-time browsing capabilities don’t extend to third-party video hosting platforms’ internal content. 800 balas 2002 ok.ru
For now, the 800 blanks keep firing. You just have to know where to look. It bombed
“I cried at the end,” writes one user in 2021. “My grandfather was a stunt double in Almería. He died in 1999. This film is for him.” Two decades later, though, 800 balas refuses to fade away