They Have a Motherland

They Have a Motherland (Russian: У них есть Родина) is a 1949 Soviet drama film directed by Aleksandr Faintsimmer and Vladimir Legoshin.[1][2]

They Have a Motherland
Russian: У них есть Родина
Directed by
Written bySergey Mikhalkov
Starring
Music byAram Khachaturyan
CinematographyAleksandr Gintsburg
CountrySoviet Union

Plot

The film tells about the representatives of Soviet intelligence, who are trying to find in West Germany an orphanage with Soviet children, which is under the supervision of British intelligence.[3]

Starring

  • Natalya Zashchipina[4] as Ira Sokolova (as Natasha Zashchipina)
  • Leonid Kotov as Sasha Butuzov (as Lyonya Kotov)
  • Pavel Kadochnikov as Aleksey Petrivich Dobrynin (as P. Kadochnikov)
  • Vera Maretskaya as Sasha's Mother (as V. Maretskaya)
  • Vsevolod Sanaev as Sorokin (as V. Sanaev)
  • Lidiya Smirnova as Smayda Landmane (as L. Smirnova)
  • Gennadi Yudin as Kurt Kraus (as G. Yudin)
  • Faina Ranevskaya[5] as Frau Vurst (as F. Ranevskaya)
  • Vladimir Solovyov as Upmanis (as V. Solovyov)[6]
gollark: Relevantly, did you know that an Australian prime minister once claimed that Australian law superseded the laws of mathematics?
gollark: It's not obfuscated enough for stuff like the potatOS magic DRM blob and [REDACTED].
gollark: I should use that stuff for obfuscation.
gollark: Now make clones of them and have a board of directors.
gollark: AMD would probably *never* go for ARM except for a few special-purpose things like they did a while ago, because half the value they bring is that they have x86 support.

References

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