Thirst (1959 film)

Thirst (Russian: Жажда) is a 1959[2] Soviet drama film directed by Yevgeny Tashkov.[3]

Thirst
Russian: Жажда
Directed byYevgeny Tashkov
Written byGrigori Pozhenyan
Starring
Music byAndrey Eshpay
CinematographyPyotr Todorovskiy[1]
Edited byT. Dokh
CountrySoviet Union
LanguageRussian

Plot

The film takes place in Odessa, besieged by the Nazis. They captured the village with the water station and, as result, the residents of Odessa were left without water. A scout named Maria goes behind enemy lines hoping to contact the workers of the water station, but the company does not receive any messages from her and decides to send the sailor Bezborodko, who speaks German very well. The squad goes after him...[4]

Cast

  • Vyacheslav Tikhonov as Oleg Bezborodko leytenant
  • Valentina Khmara as Masha (as V. Khmara)
  • Yuri Belov as Vasya Rogozin 'Patefon' (as Yu. Byelov)
  • Anton Dotsenko as Nikita Nechipaylo (as A. Datsenko)
  • Vladimir Ivanov as Tvyordokhlebov (as V. Ivanov)
  • Nikolai Timofeyev as Nikitin, polkovnik (as N. Timofeyev)
  • Boris Bityukov as Alekseyenko, kapitan-leytenant (as B. Bityukov)
  • B. Goduntsov
  • Vasili Vekshin as Kalina (as V. Vekshin)
  • Mullayan Suyargulov as Mamed (as M. Suyargulov)
  • Oleg Golubitsky as Kurt Lemke (as O. Golubitskiy)[5]
gollark: Yes, but they don't exist yet.
gollark: You're forced to use a "waitgroup" and 198561281682 goroutines.
gollark: Channels are actually quite hard to use nicely, and what is often better is "parallel iterators" or something; but Go *literally will not let you write that* with correct types.
gollark: Go makes it "easy" to be concurrent, except not really because goroutines and everything it has make introducing concurrency bugs really easy.
gollark: Despite Go's ill-deserved reputation for performance.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.