Twenty Days Without War

Twenty Days Without War
Directed by Aleksey German
Starring Yuri Nikulin
Cinematography Valeri Fedosov
Distributed by Lenfilm
Release dates
  • January 1976 (1976-01)
Running time
101 min
Country Soviet Union
Language Russian

Twenty Days Without War (Russian: Двадцать дней без войны, Dvadtsat dney bez Voyny) is a 1976 Soviet film based on a story by Konstantin Simonov, directed by Aleksey German and starring Yuri Nikulin and Lyudmila Gurchenko.[1][2]

Plot

The "Twenty Days Without War" film describes the life of Major Lopatin (actor Yuri Nikulin (1921-1997)), military journalist during World War II, who went to his hometown of Tashkent (Uzbekistan) in Middle Asia at the end of 1942 to spend a 20-day leave following the Battle of Stalingrad and to see the shooting of a film based on his wartime articles he has written, and where he was romantically involved with woman, played by the talented actress Ludmila Gurchenko (1935-2011). The film describes how the romantic views of combat held on the home front are far different from the harsh realities of front line warfare. In the film, he realizes that the romanticized views of warfare on the home front are vastly different from the realities he has encountered.[3] The film was based on the novel and screenplay of Konstantin Simonov (1915-1979), a famous military journalist who wrote the famous poem "Wait for me" during WWII in 1941. The film was mostly shot in black and white, or very muted color, as looking aged to be visually closed to that wartime. As the director, Alexei German (1938-2013), gave himself and all other crew members, including Cinematographer (Valery Fedosov (1941-1990)), Production Designer (Yevgeny Gukov (1934-1994)), and the Costume Designer (Natalia G. Toreeva), the enormous task of realistically build all the scenes in the film. All romantic scenes were filmed in Middle Asia, where the real old train was used for connection between the war zone and the home front. The military actions of this film were shot in Kaliningrad on the Baltic sea. The real Baltic Fleet had helped to coordinate military maneuvers where the real military ships were bombed by flying military planes above the ships. The buildings used for background were also the real war damaged bricks buildings, not a set, which were not rebuilt after WWII. And the cold weather also made scenes look more realistically in this film. The winter during which the film was shot, especially with the Baltic sea cold winter and winds, was very good reflected visually the bitter winters as occurred in 1941-1944 during the World War Two.

This is another German's masterpiece film produced on the Lenfilm film studio in 1976 in Leningrad (now St. Petersburg, Russia). The film was banned presumably because of its antiwar theme, but it was released in 1981 probably after interference from the film's screenwriter, Konstantin Simonov, the celebrated writer, a close friend of German's father, Yuri German, and highly regarded by the Soviet establishment.

References

  1. "Twenty Days Without War". The Cinematheque. Retrieved 24 February 2013.
  2. "TWENTY DAYS WITHOUT WAR". Lincoln Center Film Society. Retrieved 24 February 2013.
  3. Firsching, Robert. "Dvadtsat dney bez voyny (Twenty Days Without War) (1976)". RottenTomatoes. Retrieved 24 February 2013.

External links

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