"One Hundred and One" is a Soviet two-part film about the Great Patriotic War .
| One hundred and first | |
|---|---|
| Genre | war film |
| Producer | Vadim Kostromenko |
| Author script | Vadim Kostromenko Vladimir Naumtsev |
| In the main cast | Boris Borisov Nina Ilyina |
| Operator | Vladimir Dmitrievsky Yuri Garmash |
| Composer | Vladislav Kladnitsky |
| Film company | Odessa film studio |
| Duration | 139 minutes |
| A country | |
| Tongue | |
| Year | 1982 |
| IMDb | ID 4003528 |
Content
Story
The story of the “son of the regiment” Vova Didenko, a village boy who became a pupil of the intelligence platoon during the Great Patriotic War. Military hardening helped him after the war to show firmness of character and achieve enrollment in the already formed company of the preparatory class of the Suvorov school .
Cast
- Sasha Komarov - Vova Didenko
- Andrey Komarov - Vova Didenko
- Boris Borisov - foreman Belanov
- Nina Ilyina - Zhenya Grazhdankina
- Elena Kondratieva - Varya Vishnevskaya
- Evgeny Menshov - George Nesterenko, military
- Daniil Netrebin - Ivanitsky, regiment commander
- Yuri Nazarov - Ozhogin, captain at the Suvorov School
- Yuri Medvedev - Shestakov, Colonel at the Suvorov School
- Boris Saburov - Yeletsky (singing teacher)
Interesting Facts
- The protagonist was played by two twin brothers, Komarov Andrey and Sasha.
- In the scene of punishing Vova for smoking (whipping on a workbench), Andrei had to “swell” the younger brother ( although the whipping process was never shown, despite the fact that Vova was poured on the fifth spot with shag, so it was unclear from the film that whether spanking in general or whether they just decided to scare the boy ).
- One of the few children's films created in the USSR, which was never released on a licensed video, but was often shown on the central television channels of the USSR and Russia.
Links
- The film "One Hundred and One" on the official channel of the Odessa Film Studio