Until Next Spring

Until Next Spring (Russian: До будущей весны) is a 1960 Soviet drama film directed by Viktor Sokolov.[1][2][3]

Until Next Spring
Russian: До будущей весны
Directed byViktor Sokolov
Written bySergey Voronin
Starring
Music byNadezhda Simonyan
CinematographySemyon Ivanov
CountrySoviet Union
LanguageRussian

Plot

The film tells about the student of the institute who is deceived by her close person. This led to the fact that she became suspicious of the people around her and, as a result, she decided to leave the institute and go with her daughter to the village, where she met a high school teacher, Alexei Nikolayevich, an exceptionally kind and sympathetic person who helped her change her views on life for the better.[4]

Cast

  • Lyudmila Marchenko as Vera
  • Innokentiy Smoktunovskiy[5] as Aleksey
  • Galina Vasilyeva as Natasha (as G. Wassilewa)
  • Vladimir Andreyev as Vasiliy (as Wadim Andrejew)
  • Mariya Prizvan-Sokolova as Nastya
  • Valentin Arkhipenko as father of Vera (as V. Arkhipenko)
  • Nikolai Novlyansky
  • Klarina Frolova-Vorontsova
  • A. Yatsenko
  • Igor Bogdanov[6]
gollark: I think SIM cards actually run Java applications of some kind.
gollark: Well, the entire phone network is apparently awful in a variety of ways.
gollark: > 1987 - Larry Wall falls asleep and hits Larry Wall's forehead on the keyboard. Upon waking Larry Wall decides that the string of characters on Larry Wall's monitor isn't random but an example program in a programming language that God wants His prophet, Larry Wall, to design. Perl is born.
gollark: Given that it doesn't mention hex, maybe it's in another context.
gollark: ```ctest3.c: In function ‘main’:test3.c:4:15: error: invalid digit "9" in octal constant 4 | printf("%d", 099);```Sad!

References

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