Sentimental Romance (1977 film)

Sentimental Romance (Russian: Сентиментальный роман, romanized: Sentimentalny roman) is a 1976 Soviet romantic drama directed by Igor Maslennikov. It was entered into the 27th Berlin International Film Festival.[1]

Sentimentalny roman
Directed byIgor Maslennikov
Written byIgor Maslennikov
Vera Panova
StarringElena Proklova
Yelena Koreneva
Nikolai Denisov
Stanislav Lyubshin
Sergey Migitsko
Music byVladimir Dashkevich
CinematographyDmitri Meskhiyev
Edited byI. Smirnova
Release date
  • 1977 (1977)
CountrySoviet Union
LanguageRussian

Plot

The film is set in the 1920s. Shura Sevastyanov is an aspiring journalist in a small newspaper, with two-classes of a parochial school behind him. In the spirit of building communism, he is an ardent fighter against philistinism in all its forms. He denies the phenomenon of love, believing that it does not exist and that there is only friendship and sexual desire of man to woman.

Shura socializes with two friends who are nicknamed as Big Zoe and Little Zoe. Shura teaches Little Zoe, the one in love with him, the ideas of communism. He despises the beautiful Big Zoe because of her philistinism, her love for beautiful things and for her selfishness.

Suddenly Shura falls in love with Big Zoe and invites her to live together. She agrees, leaving her petty-bourgeois family behind, which tried to force her to marry an unpleasant person. The idyll is destroyed when Zoe finds a job in a cafe, which is located across the street from their home. Shura is at first indignant at Zoe's act, but then decides that it is all for the better.

When he visits the café, Shura meets a storekeeper who tries to warn Sevastyanov about the dangers which lie in the cafe for Zoe. Shura is alarmed, and when the chief editor invites him to go to Margaritovku and collect material there, Shura refuses and instead offers Andrey Cushla for the task. Andrey is a native of Margaritovka, and his older brother is the chairman of a collective farm here. He gladly accepts.

But the kulak's, which have seized power in the village kill Andrey. Shura goes to his funeral in Margaritovka, and when he returns, learns that Zoe left him and ran away with the cafe's storekeeper, in addition to taking a vast sum of money from the cash register.

Zoe's brother comes to Shura and informs him that Zoe was arrested because of the storekeeper who turned out to be a bandit. Shura goes to Ilya Gorodnitsky, the prosecutor who leads the case. Gorodnitsky is the elder brother of Syomka, Shura's sidekick. Gorodnitsky quickly lets Zoe go, but she does not return to Sevastyanov: the prosecutor, who is clearly fascinated by the beauty of Zoe, invites her to live in his family.

Shura decides to find the Little Zoe. He learns from a pioneer of her party that she left but that she will be back soon. He goes to the station to meet Zoe and witnesses Gorodnitski's departure, his wife and Big Zoe.

Cast

gollark: That doesn't make any sense.
gollark: What, objectively?
gollark: You can tell that *you* like it, and ask other people and see that *they* do or don't.
gollark: You can't look at a piece of art and somehow infer from it "ah yes, this is an objectively good piece of art".
gollark: Those are, you know, observable verifiable facts.

References

  1. "IMDB.com: Awards for Sentimentalnyy roman". imdb.com. Retrieved 26 July 2010.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.