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Ballad of a Soldier

Vladimir Ivashov  Actor Zhanna Prokhorenko  Actor Antonina Maksimova  Actor Nikolai Kryuchkov  Actor Yevgeny Urbansky  Actor

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Digital Video Disc (DVD) [Criterion Collection]

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Ballad of a Soldier

UPC: 037429167922

Studio: Criterion

Summary: The award-winning Ballad of a Soldier was the first Russian film to score an American success during the Cold War era. It is a relatively simple, uncomplicated story of a callow young Russian conscript (Vladimir Ivashov) who yearns for home and hearth during World War II. Unfortunately, only those who have committed a conspicuously heroic act are being honored with liberty. Almost in spite of himself, the boy becomes a battlefield hero, and as a result is allowed to visit his family. En route to his home, the boy uses up much of his valuable leave time through his efforts to help others. He finally gets to see his mother for a few precious moments before being called back to active duty. At the risk of sounding snobbish, we advise that you see Ballad of a Soldier in a subtitled print. The English-dubbed version borders on the ridiculous, with everyone talking in stilted sentences that sound like Soviet Damon Runyon. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Category: War

Awards: Best Film - Any Source – British Academy of Film and Television Arts Best Foreign Film – null Best Original Screenplay – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Original Screenplay – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Participation – Cannes Film Festival Best Foreign Film – Hollywood Foreign Press Association

Features: New digital transfer, with restored image and sound
Audio interview with director/co-screenwriter Grigori Chukhrai and stars Vladimir Ivashov and Zhanna Prokhorenko, conducted after a preview screening in New York
New and improved English subtitle translation

Ballad of a Soldier

Format: Digital Video Disc (DVD)

Release Date: 04/16/2002

Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Pre-1954 Standard

Audio: DD1 Dolby Digital Mono

Runtime: 88 Minutes

Sides: 1

Number of Discs: 1

Language(s) Russian

Subtitles: English

Chapters: Side #1 --
1. A Son & a Hero [3:50]
2. David & Goliath [4:20]
3. Six Days' Leave [3:10]
4. A Special Present [3:25]
5. Good Deeds [4:33]
6. Gorisov [7:26]
7. Stowaways [7:38]
8. Shura [7:18]
9. Close Call [4:29]
10. Love & Friendship [4:39]
11. Separated [2:49]
12. A Good Girl [2:58]
13. 7 Chekhov Street [6:13]
14. The Present Delivered [2:37]
15. True Love [5:33]
16. Haunted [1:56]
17. "Is That Thunder?" [5:00]
18. Sosnovka [2:31]
19. Mother & Son [2:50]
20. A Soldier [4:52]
1. Color Bars

Tom Wiener

Made in the post-Stalin thaw in Soviet filmmaking, Ballade o Soldate is refreshingly apolitical, choosing to ascribe the humanitarian impulses of its characters to their nature rather than to an adherence to state ideals. Alyosha (Vladimir Ivashov) is a scared soldier of 19 who, as much out of self-preservation as anything, manages to disable two German tanks. The film's first extended scene of dialogue sets the pattern for a portrayal of the military for the rest of the drama; Alyosha is teased by hardened officers but treated kindly by top brass. Giving one soldier a six-day pass in the middle of the war seems an extraordinary kindness, but the film resolutely insists on the basic goodness of nearly all its characters. On his journey homeward, Alyosha initiates acts of charity and is treated generously by nearly everyone he meets. His only nemesis, a bully of a guard on a freight train, winds up getting his comeuppance from-you guessed it-a lieutenant. The scenes between Alyosha and his female traveling companion Shura (Zhanna Prokhorenko) are packed with yearning but again reflect the soldier's basic honesty, since he's led to believe that she's on her way to visit her fianc?. This is one of the least horrific war films ever made, which isn't to say that it glorifies combat or ignores suffering. It also contains one of the saddest expressions of motherly love ever spoken, when Alyosha's mother bids him farewell by crying out, "I didn't wait for your father, but I'll wait for you." Director Grigori Chukhrai, after some virtuoso camerawork in the man vs. tank sequence, settles down for some lovely compositions, with deep focus shots framed by a glorious Russian sky. ~ Tom Wiener, Rovi

Cast and Crew: Grigori Chukhrai  Director 
Grigori Chukhrai  Screenwriter 
Michael Siv  Composer (Music Score) 
Valentin Yezhov  Screenwriter 
Vladimir Ivashov  Actor 
Zhanna Prokhorenko  Actor 
Antonina Maksimova  Actor 
Nikolai Kryuchkov  Actor 
Yevgeny Urbansky  Actor 
Valentina Telegina  Actor 
Ella Lezhdey  Actor 
Lev Borisov  Actor 
Marina Kremneva  Actor 
Anatoly Kuznetsov  Actor 
Yevgeni Yevstigneyev  Actor 
Vladimir Kashpur  Actor 
V. Markova  Actor 
Georgy Yumatov  Actor 
G. Yukhtin  Actor 
E. Teterin  Actor 

Country: USSR

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