Zoya | |
---|---|
Film poster | |
Directed by | Lev Arnshtam |
Written by | Lev Arnshtam Boris Chirskov |
Starring | Galina Vodyanitskaya |
Cinematography | Aleksandr Shelenkov |
Music by | Dmitri Shostakovich |
Distributed by | Soyuzdetfilm |
Release date |
|
Running time | 95 minutes |
Country | Soviet Union |
Language | Russian |
Zoya (Russian: Зоя) is a 1944 Soviet biographical war film directed by Lev Arnshtam. Margarita Aliger’s poem with the same name which had been published in September 1942 was the inspiration of the film. It was entered into the 1946 Cannes Film Festival.
Plot
The film depicts the short life of a Moscow schoolgirl Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya who at the beginning of the Great Patriotic War became a partisan-infiltrator and was executed by the Germans in November 1941 near Moscow in a village Petrishcheva. She was posthumously awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union.
Cast
- Galina Vodyanitskaya as Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya
- Tamara Altseva as Zoya's Teacher
- Aleksey Batalov
- Anatoli Kuznetsov as Boris Fomin
- Rostislav Plyatt as German Soldier
- Boris Podgornij as German Officer
- Vera Popova
- Boris Poslavsky as Owl
- Nikolai Ryzhov as Zoya's Father
- Yekaterina Skvortsova as Zoya as a child (as Katya Skvortsova)
- Kseniya Tarasova as Zoya's Mother
- Yekaterina Tarasova as Katya Tarasova
- Vladimir Volchek as Komsomol Secretary
References
- ^ Lisa A. Kirschenbaum; Nancy M. Wingfield (July 2009). "Gender and the Construction of Wartime Heroism in Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union". European History Quarterly. 39 (3): 470. doi:10.1177/0265691409105062. S2CID 145554139.
- Jay Leyda (1960). Kino: A History of the Russian and Soviet Film. George Allen & Unwin. p. 379.
- "Festival de Cannes: Zoya". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 4 January 2009.
External links
Films directed by Lev Arnshtam | |
---|---|
|
This article related to a Soviet film of the 1940s is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it. |
This article about a film on World War II is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it. |
This article about a biographical film is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it. |
- 1944 films
- 1944 war films
- 1940s Soviet films
- 1940s Russian-language films
- 1940s biographical drama films
- 1940s war drama films
- Soviet biographical drama films
- Soviet war drama films
- Soviet black-and-white films
- Soviet World War II films
- Films directed by Lev Arnshtam
- Films scored by Dmitri Shostakovich
- Biographical films about military personnel
- Films set in Moscow
- Films set in the Soviet Union
- Eastern Front of World War II films
- Russian-language war drama films
- 1940s Soviet film stubs
- World War II film stubs
- Biographical film stubs