Lyubov Yarovaya

Lyubov Yarovaya (Russian: Любовь Яровая) is a 1953 Soviet drama film directed by Yan Frid.[1] It was based on a 1926 play of the same name by Konstantin Trenyov, which was later adapted a second time as a 1970 film. The film was the most popular film released in the Soviet Union that year, with attendance figures of more than 46 million.[2]

Lyubov Yarovaya
Directed byYan Frid
Written byKonstantin Trenyov (play)
Music byVenedikt Pushkov
CinematographyApollinari Dudko
Aleksandr Sysoyev
Production
company
Lenfilm Studio
Release date
13 March 1953
Running time
155 minutes
CountrySoviet Union
LanguageRussian

Subject

Russian Civil War

Cast

  • Zinaida Karpova as Lyubov Yarovaya
  • Igor Gorbachyov as Shvandya
  • Elena Granovskaya as Elena Ivanovna Gornostaeva
  • Valentina Kibardina as Panova
  • Aleksandr Mazayev as Yarovoy
gollark: Oh, sure. But what I obviously* meant is that I'd make my program generate that so whoever reviews them is subject to it.
gollark: Sure, the visual processing stuff is "obviously part of my mind" and "accounts for something like a quarter of its energy requirements" and whatever, but bee it.
gollark: I mean, I don't exactly consider it lying to myself if "I" misprocess an optical illusion somehow.
gollark: Well, it depends on where you draw the boundaries of your identity, really.
gollark: What if I use my cognitohazard (which is actually generated via specifically seeded simplex noise) which causes perception of arbitrary images as Perlin noise?

References

  1. Goble p.848
  2. Rollberg p.249

Bibliography

  • Goble, Alan. The Complete Index to Literary Sources in Film. Walter de Gruyter, 1999.
  • Rollberg, Peter. Historical Dictionary of Russian and Soviet Cinema. Scarecrow Press, 2008.


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