Luna Park is a 1992 Franco-Russian drama directed by Pavel Lungin in which Andrei, a muscular antisemitic skinhead who leads a violent nationalist gang in post-Soviet Moscow, discovers that his long-lost father is not the Afghan war hero he was told about but a warm, eccentric Jewish composer named Naoum living in the city — and rather than kill him as he originally intended, Andrei finds himself drawn to the old man and slowly begins questioning everything his gang stands for, until his brutal crew discovers his Jewish roots, ransacks his father's apartment, and kidnaps Naoum — forcing Andrei to choose between his gang and his blood.