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What's the name of this movie?

The dawn here is quiet

Plot:

The writer Bao Vasilyev published the novel "The Dawn here is quiet ..." in the 196s. After the novel was published, it was highly praised and has been adapted into drama and opera. In 1972, director Rostotski put it on the screen again, and he and the original author of the novel, Bao Vasilyev, co-wrote it.

The film won the Venice International Film Festival Memorial Award in 1973, the All-Soviet Film Festival Award, and the Lenin Prize in 1975.

The story is: In the summer of 1942, Warrant Officer Vaskov led two classes of female anti-aircraft machine gunners to station in a village near a small station. The station is surrounded by strategic places, and enemy planes often come to bomb or harass. One day, Rita, the monitor, found Deco airborne in the nearby Woods. So Vaskov led a team of five girls, including Lida, Ranniya, Lisa, Galka and sonia, to search for Dekou in the forest. In the battle with the enemy, all the girls died one by one. The monitor Lida didn't want to drag Vaskov down after being seriously injured. She entrusted Vaskov to find her son and then shot herself. Vaskov went straight to Dekou's camp in the forest with hatred. He disarmed the enemy and took four German prisoners to the station. On the way, he saw the reinforcements headed by the major running towards him, and was relieved to faint because of excessive bleeding from the wound.

Many years later, Vaskov, who was white-haired, cut off his left hand and put on his prosthetic hand, took Lida's son, who had grown into a young officer, to the Woods where he fought, found the graves of these five female soldiers and set up a marble tombstone for them. Some happy young people who have never experienced war and come to visit the local area can't help but stand in mourning for the tombstone.

The idea to be expressed in the film is that war should not be girls' business, but girls should be associated with all the beautiful things in life. However, the cursed fascism forced some tender girls to lose their youth and lives in the war.

The film uses a sharp contrast. The director used a set of illusory color pictures to show the love and happiness that female machine gunners had or might have, and another set of grim black and white pictures to show the real fighting life of female soldiers. The two sets of pictures appear alternately, which makes the audience realize how beautiful the lives of these girls would be if there were no fascist aggression, and the cruel Deko completely changed their lives. The film condemns that war is absolutely incompatible with human civilization and personal happiness. In the film, the combination of memories and reality not only shows the heroines' love for a better life, but also praises their patriotism that they are not afraid of sacrifice.

the touching power of the film mainly comes from its authenticity. The author of the novel, Bao Vasiliev, the director Rostotski and the photographer V Shumski all participated in the Great Patriotic War, and they have real feelings about the war. In the spring of 1992, when Rostotski gave a lecture at the Beijing Film Academy, he said: For a man born in 1922 like him, only 3% of the survivors experienced this war. He was the lucky one among these 3%, but he lost a leg and later put on a prosthetic limb, so he was a second-class disabled soldier. He didn't engage in movies until after the war. His films include Land and People, Standing in the Wind, Waiting for Monday and so on. He was a judge of the 2nd (1995) Shanghai International Film Festival and attended the 3rd (1997) Shanghai International Film Festival as a guest.

Through this film, director Rostotski discovered a group of new actresses. Although these young actresses who played female soldiers did not participate in the Great Patriotic War, they felt the atmosphere of the Great Patriotic War with the help of the original author, screenwriter, director and photographer who personally participated in the war, thus truly recreating the image of their predecessors. Today, Yi Shevchuk, who plays Lida, and O Osterloh Umova, who plays Rania, are famous actors.

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