Maksim Perepelitsa

Maksim Perepelitsa (Russian: Максим Перепелица) is a 1956 comedy film directed by Anatoly Granik.[1] The song Let's Go (known in Russian as "V Put") was written for this film.

Maksim Perepelitsa
Directed byAnatoly Granik
Written byIvan Stadnyuk
StarringLeonid Bykov
Lyudmila Kostyrko
Nikolai Yakovchenko
Aleksandr Borisov
Music byVasily Solovyov-Sedoi
CinematographyDmitri Meskhiev
Production
company
Release date
  • January 9, 1956 (1956-01-09)
Running time
94 min.
CountrySoviet Union
LanguageRussian
Ukrainian

Synopsis

Maxime Perepelitsa is a cheerful and quick-witted guy from a Ukrainian village, well-known personality in his native town. He has a fantastic ability to invent all sorts of stories and take time off from work. Having received a summons to the army, wishing to "protect" himself against potential rivals, he sends pumpkins to all the guys in the village on behalf of his beloved girl Maroussi – this is a traditional rejection of courtship in Ukraine which ends up causing a stir in the village. The kolkhoz assembly even wants to deprive Perepelitsa of his honorable duty to serve in the Soviet Army, but Maksim gives his word to correct his behavior. In the army he dodges responsibility when trying to avoid the difficulties of service, but here his trick is out of turn and is arrested in the guardhouse. However his flexible character and good-natured personality make him pliable in re-education. Showing himself as smart and having initiative during a training exercise, he gets the rank of junior sergeant, shows true heroism in his native village during the holidays, and Maroussia finally reciprocates his feelings.

Cast

  • Leonid Bykov as Maksim Perepelitsa
  • Lyudmila Kostirko as Maroussia, bride Maksima
  • Nikolai Yakovchenko as blacksmith Kondrat Perepelitsa, Maksim's father
  • Aleksandr Borisov as postman Marco Mukha, Kondrat's friend
  • George Asipenka as Opanas, Kondrat's friend
  • Basil Fushchych as Stepan Levada, one of Maksim
  • Taisiya Litvinenko as Vasilinka, Stepan's beloved
  • Nina Tamarova as Yavdokha, seller of flowers
  • Vladimir Efimov as Ivan Tverdokhlib, unfortunate groom of Maroussia
  • Georgy Vitsin as Musiy, pensioner
  • Alexander Stepanov as Fomin, a lieutenant, a platoon commander
  • Konstantin Sorokin as Sablin, foreman, deputy commander of a platoon
  • Alexander Susnin as Vasily Ezhikov, a colleague of Maksim
  • Sergei Sibel as Samus, colleague Maksim
  • Radner Muratov as Taskirov, a colleague of Maksim
  • Paul Usovnichenko as Kupriyanov, a platoon commander (in credits as Kupriyanov, in the film as Vetrov)
  • Boris Leskin as Mykola

Production

Anatoly Granik for most of the major roles invited Ukrainian theater actors, as all of the rural scenes of the film took place in Ukraine.[2] The main characters who came to serve in the army are Ukrainians.

In 1955 also the film Private Ivan was made featuring a very similar story; author of the script and of the source material Ivan Stadnyuk openly accused the creators of "Private Ivan" in plagiarism.[3]

After watching the movie "Maksim Perepelitsa" the army accused screenwriter Stadnyuk of promoting familiarity in the army. This alleged familiarity was reflected in the scene where the company commander, senior lieutenant Kupriyanov invites Maksim, after he returns from the guardhouse, to sit beside him on the bench and at the same time gives him a cigarette from his own cigarette case.[3]

gollark: I mean, possibly good if you want to run computer vision fast, but otherwise bad.
gollark: No, they're just bad.
gollark: That's not really very acronym-y. They generally just remove boring words like "he" or "or".
gollark: Could you use this for pangram generation? That might be cool.
gollark: I see.

See also

References

Maksim Perepelitsa on IMDb

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