Say a Word for the Poor Hussar
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| Say a Word for the Poor Hussar | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Eldar Ryazanov |
| Written by | Eldar Ryazanov Grigori Gorin |
| Produced by | Boris Krishtul |
| Starring | Stanislav Sadalskiy Oleg Basilashvili Valentin Gaft Yevgeny Leonov |
| Narrated by | Andrei Mironov |
| Cinematography | Vladimir Nakhabtsev |
| Music by | Andrey Petrov[1] |
Production company | |
Release date |
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Running time | 167 minutes |
| Country | Soviet Union |
| Language | Russian |
Say a Word for the Poor Hussar[2] (Russian: О бедном гусаре замолвите слово),[3] translit. O bednom gusare zamolvite slovo. Literary “Put a good word for a poor hussar”) is a 1981 Soviet film directed by Eldar Ryazanov, shot in the style of a historical tragicomedy.
A regiment of hussars arrives at the provincial town of Gubernsk for summer maneuvers. The hussars live a frivolous outside the barracks and away from the metropolitan authorities, enjoying evening shows in the theater, billiards, card games and flirting with the local women. But soon the regiment gets into trouble when Count Merzlyaev arrives from St. Petersburg on the personal orders of the Russian Emperor with a special mission.
Some officers of the hussars regiment are suspected of "free-thinking" and of conspiring against the government. Merzlyaev offers these officers a test: they must shoot a rebel, thus demonstrating their loyalty to the emperor. However, Merzlyaev's plan to test the officers' loyalty by an "execution by shooting" is a ruse: the cartridges are blank, and the role of "the condemned conspirator" will be played by a stranger. If the officers refuse to shoot they will face a military court and penal servitude.
For the role of the "conspirator" Merzlyaev hires Bubentsov, an actor who is in jail for stupid carelessness. Merzlyaev's ruse goes perfectly, but all of a sudden Cornet Alexei Pletnev, one of the officers who should carry out an execution, lets the "rebel" Bubentsov go free.
Merzlyaev is ready to take any action to save his plan and his reputation, to create any abomination, but is unable to defeat love and generosity of honest people...
Cast
- Stanislav Sadalskiy as cornet Alexei V. Pletnev[4]
- Oleg Basilashvili as count Merzlyaev, privy councilor from St Petersburg
- Yevgeny Leonov as Athanasios Bubentsov, provincial actor
- Irina Mazurkievich as Nastya Bubentsova, provincial actress, Bubentsov's daughter
- Valentin Gaft as colonel Ivan Pokrovsky, the commander of a cavalry regiment
- Georgi Burkov as Artyuhov, Merzlyaev's valet
- Zinovy Gerdt as Lev Pertsovsky, dealer parrots
- Victor Pavlov as jailer Stepan
- Boryslav Brondukov as 2nd jailer
- Vladimir Nosik as cornet Simpomponchik
- Valery Pogoreltsev as hussar Lytkin
- Nikolai Kochegarov as 2nd Hussar
- Alexey Shmarinov as 3rd Hussar
- Anatoliy Egorov as 4th Hussar
- Natalya Gundareva as Juju, milliner from the Madame Josephine's salon
- Svetlana Nemolyaeva as Zizi, milliner from the Madame Josephine's salon
- Liya Akhedzhakova as Lulu, milliner from the Madame Josephine's salon
- Valentina Talyzina as Anna Speshneva, provincial actress
- Grigory Shpigel as prompter
- Gotlib Roninson as Mark Mavzon, provincial actor
- Viktor Filippov as Theodore Spiridonov, provincial actor
- Alexander Belyavsky as governor
- Zoya Vasilkova as governor's wife
- Eldar Ryazanov as confectioner
- Andrei Mironov as narrator (voice)
Music
The music for the film was written by the prominent Soviet composer Andrei Petrov, who had frequently worked with Eldar Ryazanov. The songs in the film were based on poems of famous Russian poets from different eras: Denis Davydov, Pyotr Vyazemsky, Mikhail Savoyarov, Marina Tsvetaeva, Mikhail Arkadyevich Svetlov. Later, an album of music based on the film was released, which was recorded with the participation of the USSR State Committee for Cinematography Orchestra (conductor Sergei Skripka) and the State Wind Orchestra of the RSFSR.