If you are a researcher or film student genuinely trying to locate this media for academic purposes (the study of Eastern European exploitation cinema or lost Russian art-house films), here is a safe, legal roadmap:
The search for is ultimately a search for a ghost. It represents the dark, unorganized underbelly of digital culture—where art and taboo collide, where file names outlive the files they represent, and where numbers (like 132) become archaeological mysteries. Russian Lolita -2007-.132
In torrent metadata (BitTorrent), pieces are hashed. The 132 could be a piece index. Alternatively, in scene release groups, a number like 132 sometimes denotes a or a repack number . For example, a group might release: Russian.Lolita.2007.DVDRip.XviD-GROUP.r132 . If you are a researcher or film student
Using NLP (Natural Language Processing) analysis of forums where similar strings appear, we can profile the typical user of "Russian Lolita -2007-.132": The 132 could be a piece index
The most plausible technical reading is that .132 is a split archive marker from a RapidShare or Usenet download. The user likely has parts 1 through 131 and is missing the last piece.