Step Forward (film)

Step Forward (Russian: Шаг навстречу, romanized: Shag navstrechu) is a Soviet film-an almanac, consisting of five novels.

Step Forward
Lyudmila Gurchenko as Valentina
Directed byNaum Birman[1]
Produced byGalina Shadur
Karen Shakhnazarov
Written byEmil Braginsky
StarringLyudmila Gurchenko
Nikolay Volkov Jr.
Andrey Popov
Yevgeny Leonov
Lev Durov
Boris Shcherbakov
Andrei Mironov
Music byStanislav Pozhlakov
CinematographyAlexander Chirov
Edited byLyudmila Sviridenko
Production
company
Release date
  • 1975 (1975)
Running time
77 min.
CountryRussia
LanguageRussian

Plot

Five novels, united by the history of the nascent love of two elderly people, meeting every day on the way to work. Meeting every day in public transport, they do not suspect that they are neighbors around the house, and they are constantly giving each other a lot of trouble.[2]

Cast

Step Forward
  • Lyudmila Gurchenko as Valentina Stepanovna
  • Nikolay Volkov Jr. as Igor Anatolievich
  • Yelena Anderegg as janitor
The Captain's Daughter
  • Andrey Popov as captain
  • Yelena Tsyplakova as Lida, captain's daughter, student
  • Georgy Vitsin as man in buffet
  • Lyudmila Ivanova as taxi driver
  • Vera Titova as barmaid
  • Anatoly Popov as student
  • Natalia Chetverikova as girl at airport
Father Seraphim
Meat in Argentine
Wedding March
  • Yelena Drapeko as Katya Zaitseva
  • Boris Shcherbakov as Vovka Monastyryov, her fiance
  • Anatoly Rudakov as Sergey
  • Svetlana Vadas as Vera
  • Stanislav Sokolov as seller
Total for 30 kopecks

Filming

Some episodes of film were shot at the stations of Saint Petersburg Metro Narvskaya and Dachnoye.[5]

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gollark: ANTARCTIC OBSCURITY is theoretically capable of localization if you have multiple receivers with either very accurate synchronized clocks (doubtful) or (if you don't mind noise and/or manual data gathering) signal strength readings.
gollark: RFID is generally rather short-range, so no.
gollark: Computer vision is hard, RFID tags would be easier.
gollark: Google occasionally does good things for privacy, weirdly.

References

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