The Girl from Leningrad
The Girl from Leningrad | |
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Russian: Фронтовые подруги | |
Directed by | Viktor Eisymont |
Written by | |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Vladimir Rapoport |
Music by | Vissarion Shebalin |
Release date |
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Country | Soviet Union |
Language | Russian |
The Girl from Leningrad (Russian: Фронтовые подруги) is a 1941[2] Soviet World War II film directed by Viktor Eisymont.[3][4][5]
The film takes place during the Finnish war. A group of girls voluntarily go to the front, they help doctors save the lives of wounded soldiers, and also fight with the enemy.[6]
Plot
[edit]In a bustling Red Cross office, a group of young women volunteers sign up to join a team of nurses who will work in a frontline hospital during World War II. Among them is Natasha Matveeva, a confident and determined young woman who consciously chooses to serve as a nurse to be closer to her fiancé, Lieutenant Sergei Korovin. As the group of volunteers travels to their destination, they are told that the hospital is not yet set up, and they must first clean and prepare a neglected building, gather water, and prepare sleeping arrangements. Soon after, the wounded begin arriving, and the nurses are thrust into their work.
As the days pass, Natasha learns that one of the patients, a scout named Andrei Morozov, requires special care in the heavy casualty ward. Morozov, a serious and reserved man about whom even newspapers have written, is assigned to Natasha’s care. She spends long hours speaking with him, reading passages from War and Peace, and singing songs to soothe him. Slowly, the cold and distant Morozov begins to thaw, and it becomes clear that his feelings for Natasha have grown beyond just medical attention.
Despite the growing attraction between them, Natasha refuses to acknowledge her feelings for the wounded scout, convincing herself and her friends that her heart belongs only to her fiancé, whom she believes is nearby. She continues to deny any emotional connection to Morozov, even as she spends more time with him. However, her own fate takes a turn when she becomes injured and finds herself in the same hospital, now in need of the same support and care she once provided to Morozov.
Cast
[edit]- Zoya Fyodorova as Natasha
- Mariya Kapustina as Tamara
- Olga Fyodorina as The Cricket
- Tamara Alyoshina as Zina
- Yekaterina Melentyeva as Shura
- Andrei Abrikosov as Lt. Sergei Korovin
- Konstantin Adashevsky as Dr. Katner
- Yury Tolubeev as Maj. Braginsky
- Boris Blinov as Andrei Morosov[7]
References
[edit]- ^ Три плюс два: 5 знаменитых фильмов по сценариям Сергея Михалкова
- ^ В библиотеке Маяковского пройдут показы фильмов на английском
- ^ 7 иностранных ремейков отечественных фильмов
- ^ От блокады до «Варяга». Лучшие фильмы режиссера Виктора Эйсымонта
- ^ Ну и денек: 20 декабря 2004 года
- ^ Фронтовые подруги
- ^ Фронтовые подруги (1941) Full Cast & Crew
External links
[edit]
- 1941 films
- 1941 war films
- 1941 in the Soviet Union
- 1940s Soviet films
- 1940s Russian-language films
- 1940s war drama films
- Soviet war drama films
- Soviet black-and-white films
- Soviet World War II films
- Lenfilm films
- Russian-language war drama films
- 1940s Soviet film stubs
- World War II film stubs
- War drama film stubs