Six P.M.
{{short description|1944 film by Ivan Pyryev}}
{{Infobox film
| name = Six P.M.
| image = Six_P.M._1944_film_poster.jpg
| caption =
| director = Ivan Pyryev
| producer =
| writer = Viktor Gusev
| narrator =
| starring = Marina Ladynina
Ivan Lyubeznov
Yevgeny Samoylov
| music = Tikhon Khrennikov
| cinematography = Valentin Pavlov
| editing = Anna Kulganek
| studio = Mosfilm
| distributor =
| released = {{film date|1944}}
| runtime = 94 minutes
| country = Soviet Union
| language = Russian
| budget =
}}
Six P.M. is the 1946 American release title of the 1944 Soviet World War II film At 6 P.M. After the War ({{langx|ru|В 6 часов вечера после войны|V shest chasov vechera posle voyny}}, (also At six o'clock in the evening after the war) by Ivan Pyryev.{{IMDb title|0037423}}
Plot
In the very beginning of the Great Patriotic War, a young artillery officer Pavel (Ivan Lyubeznov) receives a package from an orphanage. In a leave, his comrade and he go to the orphanage to see the children who sent it. Pavel meets there a young woman Varia (Marina Ladynina). They fall in love from the first sight. They agree to meet again in Moscow "in 6 p.m. after the War'. Varia joins the army and becomes an anti-aircraft gunner. Varia and Pavel meet again after the War.
The title
The Russian film title alludes to the agreement of the Good Soldier Švejk and sapper Vodička on their way to the front, to meet at the pub "By the Chalice" (U Kalicha) "at 6 p.m. after the war". In the film, the two young lovers agree to meet at 6 p.m. after the war at the Bolshoy Kamenny Bridge in Moscow. Since then the expression has become a Russian catch phrase."«И жизнь, и слёзы, и любовь...» Происхождение, значение, судьба 1500 крылатых слов и выражений русского языка", 2013, {{ISBN|545739798X}}, [https://books.google.com/books?id=7b1pAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA140 p. 140]
Another version connects the title with a poem written by the Soviet poet Yevgeniy Dolmatovsky during the Winter war with Finland in 1940. The poem entitled merely '6 P.M." has the line "at 6 P.M. after the War" as the refrain.
Facts about the film
- The film predicted that the War would end in May.
- The film earned the 1946 Stalin Prize of 2nd degree for the director, the composer Tikhon Khrennikov, screenwriter Viktor Gusev, and lead actors Marina Ladynina, Ivan Lyubeznov, and Yevgeny Samoylov.[https://web.archive.org/web/20180420000709/http://2011.russiancinema.ru/index.php?e_dept_id=2&e_movie_id=764 В шесть часов вечера после войны]
Cast
- Marina Ladynina - Varia Pankova
- Ivan Lyubeznov - Lieutenant Pavel Demidov
- Yevgeny Samoylov - senior lieutenant Vasily Kudryashov
- Ariadne Lisak - Fenya, Varia's friend
- Elena Savitskaya - Aunt Katya, building manager
- Yevgeny Morgunov - artilleryman
- Mikhail Pugovkin - artilleryman
- Tatyana Barysheva - resident of house number 5
- Irina Murzaeva - pianist
- Lyudmila Semyonova - anti-aircraft gunner
- Aleksandr Antonov - commander
- Margarita Zharov - collective farm girl (uncredited)
- Alexandra Danilova - anti-aircraft gunner (uncredited)
- Stepan Krylov - military (uncredited)
- Tatiana Govorkov - neighbor (uncredited)
References
{{reflist}}
{{Ivan Pyryev}}
Category:1944 in the Soviet Union
Category:1940s romantic musical films
Category:1940s musical drama films
Category:1940s war romance films
Category:1940s war drama films
Category:1944 romantic drama films
Category:1940s Russian-language films
Category:Soviet musical drama films
Category:Soviet war drama films
Category:Soviet romantic drama films
Category:Soviet black-and-white films
Category:Soviet World War II films
Category:Films scored by Tikhon Khrennikov
Category:Russian-language romantic musical films
Category:Russian-language romantic drama films
Category:Russian-language musical drama films
Category:Russian-language war drama films
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