True Friends (film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Written byAlexander Galich, Konstantin Isaev
Produced byViktor Tsirgiladze
True Friends
French film poster
Directed byMikhail Kalatozov
Written byAlexander Galich, Konstantin Isaev
Produced byViktor Tsirgiladze
StarringVasili Merkuryev
Boris Chirkov
Aleksandr Borisov
Alexey Gribov
CinematographyMark Magidson
Edited byMaria Timofeyeva
Music byTikhon Khrennikov
Production
company
Release date
  • 20 April 1954 (1954-04-20)
Running time
102 minutes
CountrySoviet Union
LanguageRussian
External image
image icon 1954 Soviet poster of True Friends

True Friends (Russian: Верные друзья, romanized: Vernye druz'ya) is a 1954 Soviet adventure comedy-drama film directed by Mikhail Kalatozov.

The film tells the story of Alexander, Boris, and Vasily, three old friends who now barely see each other as they are busy with their professional lives. They embark on a long-planned voyage on a raft down the Yauza river, which turns into a series of comical accidents but also strengthens their friendship.

Once, on the outskirts of Moscow, three young friends—Sashka, Borya, and Vaska—dreamed of adventure. While drifting on an old boat along the Yauza River, they fantasized about journeying down a great river and made a pact to reunite someday to fulfill their dream.

Thirty years later, Boris Petrovich Chizhov has become a renowned neurosurgery professor, Alexander Fyodorovich Lapin is a doctor of biological sciences and the director of an Experimental Institute of Animal Husbandry, and Vasily Vasilyevich Nestratov is an academician of architecture. Remembering their childhood promise, Lapin gathers his old friends, and together, they embark on a journey down a great river on a wooden raft.

During their journey, the loyal friends experience numerous adventures. For Lapin, the trip brings happiness as he reunites with a long-lost love. Chizhov showcases his surgical brilliance, performing a life-saving craniocerebral operation on an injured girl at a local hospital. As for Nestratov, the journey transforms his outlook on life, humbling his bureaucratic arrogance and bringing him closer to his roots.

Cast

Production

True Friends was made in the aftermath of the death of Joseph Stalin, when political control over Soviet cinema relaxed considerably. Josephin Woll wrote that "his death liberated director Kalatozov... True Friends was his first Thaw project".[1] Its script was submitted for approval in 1952, but it was only authorized for filming after Stalin's death.[2]

Reception

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI