Introduction to Life explained

Introduction to Life
Director:Igor Talankin
Producer:Lydia Kanareikina
Narrator:Olga Bergholz
Starring:Boris Tokarev
Nina Urgant
Yuri Volkov
Nikolai Burlyayev
Natalia Bogunova
Music:Alfred Schnittke
Cinematography:Valeriy Vladimirov
Vladimir Minaev
Studio:Mosfilm
Runtime:101 minutes
Country:Soviet Union
Language:Russian

Introduction to Life (Russian: Вступление|Vstuplijenije) is a 1963 Soviet drama film about World War II seen through the eyes of a young boy from Leningrad. It won a Special Jury Prize at the 24th Venice International Film Festival.[1]

Plot

The Great Patriotic War is nearing the end. In a train two youths, Volodya (Boris Tokarev) and Valya (Natalia Bogunova) returning from evacuation to Leningrad cross paths for a few minutes. The plot carries them to their first random encounter that takes place in the summer of 1941 at a crowded refugee station. The period of growing adolescents, their introduction to adult life occurs in the arduous years of war. During the bombing of the evacuation train near the Mga station, dies the mother (Lyubov Sokolova) of Valya and her younger sister Lucy (Lida Volkova). After long wanderings in orphanages, the girls are found by their own aunt and they find shelter in her house.

The fate of Volodya Jakubowski develops in a difficult way; mother (Nina Urgant) is divorced from his own father (Yuri Volkov), who has long had another wife and son Oleg (Nikolai Burlyayev), a half-brother of Volodya. In evacuation the mother is trying to arrange her personal life, and gets close to the army captain (Stanislav Chekan). Not wanting to burden her, the teenager takes a job at a defensive aircraft factory and moves to a hostel. There he finds a good friend Romka (Valery Nosik). Learning that the woman is pregnant, the captain breaks up with Volodya's mother. The unfavorable reputation of a "loose" woman, a baby girl born without a father, make her unable to rent decent accommodation. The teen takes has a difficult time coping with his mother's unhappy personal life, and goes to Leningrad to his father, so that he would issue a due summons to the city from which the blockade was only recently lifted. Jakubowski Sr. initially refuses to help (facts about the mothers infidelity are discovered) but matured Volodya is insistent and gets what he wants. The father objects to communication between Volodya and Oleg however the teenagers are introduced and become friends.

Cast

Notes and References

  1. https://web.archive.org/web/20180506233924/http://2011.russiancinema.ru/index.php?e_dept_id=2&e_movie_id=1207 «Вступление»
  2. Alexander Maryamov. Soviet Screen (September 18, 1975): Character Line