Antosha Rybkin
Antosha Rybkin, (Russian: Антоша Рыбкин) is a 1942 Soviet comedy film directed by Konstantin Yudin.[1][2][3][4]
Antosha Rybkin | |
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Russian: Антоша Рыбкин | |
Directed by | Konstantin Yudin |
Written by |
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Starring |
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Music by |
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Cinematography | Boris Petrov |
Country | Soviet Union |
Plot
The commander decides to hold a concert of the front brigade of artists in order to divert the attention of the enemy, who is about to attack the village. Chef Antosh Rybkin should play the role of a German corporal, get into the enemy's rear and release his native village from him.
Starring
- Boris Chirkov as Antosha Rybkin (as B. Chirkov)
- Marina Ladynina as Larisa Semyonovna (as M. Ladynina)
- Vladimir Gribkov as Pal Palych Kozlovskiy (as V. Gribkov)
- Lyudmila Shabalina as Katya Vlasova (as L. Shebalina)
- Konstantin Sorokin as Fedya (as K. Sorokin)
- Nikolay Kryuchkov as Commander (as N. Kryuchkov)
- Tatyana Govorkova as Mariya Ivanovna (uncredited)
- Vera Krasovitskaya as Larisa Semyonovna (singing voice) (uncredited)
- Grigory Shpigel as Drunken machine gunner (uncredited)
- Evgeniy Teterin as German Soldier (uncredited)[5]
gollark: Approval voting is cool and good™, pretty simple, and much better than first past the post.
gollark: It's not grounded in actual formal logic or something.
gollark: What do you mean "logic"?
gollark: A good compromise leaves everyone *happy*, but sometimes isn't possible.
gollark: If you just allocated the vote *randomly*, that would satisfy neither group, and is bad.
References
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