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The Living and the Dead (1964 film)

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1964 film
The Living and the Dead
Film poster
Directed byAleksandr Stolper
Written byAleksandr Stolper
Konstantin Simonov (novel)
Produced byLazar Milkis
StarringKirill Lavrov
Viktor Avdyushko
Anatoli Papanov
CinematographyNikolai Olonovsky
Edited byYekaterina Ovsyannikova
Production
company
Mosfilm
Release date
  • 22 February 1964 (1964-02-22)
Running time201 minutes
CountrySoviet Union
LanguageRussian

The Living and the Dead (Russian: Живые и мёртвые, romanizedZhivye i myortvye) is a 1964 Soviet World War II drama film directed by Aleksandr Stolper and produced by Mosfilm based on the 1959 novel The Living and the Dead by Konstantin Simonov.

Plot

The film spans the period from the early days of the Great Patriotic War to the middle of winter 1941–1942, culminating in the Soviet counteroffensive near Moscow. This grand narrative of six months of catastrophic retreat followed by a powerful counterstrike is shown through the experiences of one man, Ivan Sintsov (played by Kirill Lavrov), a correspondent for an army newspaper. The war begins while Sintsov is on vacation with his wife, and he tries to return to his unit located in Western Belarus. However, his unit is overrun by the advancing Wehrmacht, making the journey impossible.

Near the town of Borisov, Sintsov meets another officer also attempting to reach his unit. Together, they go to the road to find transportation, but during a German air raid, the officer and the car he stopped are blown up. Sintsov continues his journey alone, eventually being assigned to a military newspaper in Mogilev and later another near Yelnia. The movie describes his work as a war correspondent during these trying times and his encounters with figures like Brigade Commander Fyodor Serpilin (played by Anatoly Papanov), whose steadfastness deeply influences him. Through his experiences, Sintsov transitions from a journalist to a soldier, ultimately fighting as a common infantryman, convinced that he must fulfill his duty in the face of adversity.

Cast

References

  1. Энциклопедия отечественного кино. Александр Борисович Столпер

External links

Films by Aleksandr Stolper


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