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Baba Yaga (disambiguation)
Topics referred to by the same term From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Baba Yaga is a supernatural creature in Slavic mythology, appearing as an old woman.
Look up Baba Yaga in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Baba Yaga may also refer to:
Characters
- Yaga (a younger incarnation of Baba Yaga) is the main character in the 2022 video game Blacktail
- Baba Yaga, a witch who eats children in the 2021 animated film Secret Magic Control Agency
- Baba Yaga (Hellboy), a character in the Hellboy comic series and the 2019 film Hellboy
- "Baba Yaga", a nickname for the 2014-2017 character John Wick
- Baba Yaga, a character in the 2011-2017 novel series Lord Marksman and Vanadis
- Baba Yaga, a character in the 2002-2015 comic book series Fables
- Baba Yaga, a 1986 character from the video game series Castlevania
- Baba Yaga (Dungeons & Dragons), a powerful antagonist in the fantasy role playing game Dungeons & Dragons
- The Tale About Baba-Yaga, Russian fairy tale collected in the late-18th century.
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Films and television
- Baba Yaga, a 2021 animated film directed by Eric Darnell
- Baba Yaga: Terror of the Dark Forest, a 2020 Russian horror film
- "Baba Yaga", the first episode of the 1989 TV series Valentina (TV series)
- Baba Yaga (1973 film), an Italian-French erotic thriller directed by Corrado Farina
- Baba Yaga (2023 film), a Russian animated fantasy adventure film
Other uses
- Baba Yaga (aircraft), Ukrainian military drone
- Baba Yaga: The Temple of the Witch, playable bonus level of the 2015 video game Rise of the Tomb Raider
- Tamara Samsonova, Russian serial killer known as Granny Ripper or Baba Yaga
- Baba Yaga (album), 1999 studio album by Norwegian musician Annbjørg Lien
- "The Baba Yaga", story in the 1998 comic book Hellboy: The Chained Coffin and Others
- Baba-Yaga, symphonic poem by Anatoly Liadov (1904)
- Baba Yaga, international folk rock band co-founded by Irish rock-musician Jamie Winchester and Hungurian keyboardist and composer Tibor Bornai with collaboration with Russian folk choir ensemble «Karagod» in 1989. The band included other Hungurian and Russian musicians on drums, guitars, bass and ethnic instruments and released three studio albums: Baba Yaga (1990), Where Will You Go (with international radio hit So Ends Another Day, 1993) and Secret Combination (1999). The band disbanded in 2008.
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