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Ballada o soldate / Ballad of a Soldier (1959) [The Criterion Collection #148]

Posted By: Rare-1
Ballada o soldate / Ballad of a Soldier (1959) [The Criterion Collection #148]

Ballada o soldate / Ballad of a Soldier (1959) [The Criterion Collection #148]
BDRip | MKV | 988 x 720 | AVC @ 8361 Kbps | 88 min | 5.64 Gb
Audio: Russian AC3 5.1 @ 640 Kbps | Subs: English, (.srt)
Genre: Drama, Romance, War | USSR

During World War II, 19 year old soldier Alyosha gets a medal as a reward for a heroic act at the front. Instead of this medal he asks for a few days leave to visit his mother and repair the roof of their home. On the train eastwards he meets Shura who is on her way to her aunt. In those few days traveling together they fall in love.

IMDB 7.9/10 from 6002 users

Director: Grigoriy Chukhray
Writer: Grigoriy Chukhray, Valentin Ezhov
Actors: Vladimir Ivashov, Zhanna Prokhorenko, Antonina Maksimova, Nikolay Kryuchkov
Rated: Not Rated
Runtime: 88 min

A young soldier (Ivashov) fighting on the front during WWII heroically disables two German tanks and is rewarded with a six-day leave. As he makes the long journey home to see his mother (Maximova) he meets a variety of people, both friendly and antagonistic, who need his help. Though he finally makes it to his mother's door, he never gets to spend his leave quite as he intended before having to return to almost certain death at the front.

This startlingly realistic and lovingly detailed picture transcends its dramatic premise to embody on several levels the tale of all the Soviet people. An episodic and visually haunting film with modest but never overdone touches of comedy, romance, and sentimentality, BALLAD OF A SOLDIER is a fine example of the Soviet realist tradition–a style of filmmaking paralleled by the more cinematically innovative techniques of such Soviet directors as Sergei Paradzhanov (SHADOWS OF FORGOTTEN ANCESTORS) and Andrei Tarkovsky (MY NAME IS IVAN). Although the film is nationalistic, this and several of Chukrai's other films (e.g. THE FORTY-FIRST) nevertheless contain a palpable critique of Stalinism and its "cult of the hero," suggesting that humanity is more important than heroism.


Forget the stereotypes of Cold War-era Soviet cinema. Forget collectivist farm tractors filmed with the same photogenic reverence given to Ingrid Bergman in Casablanca. The Criterion Collection is counteracting decades of Western decadence with simultaneous releases of 1959's Ballad of a Soldier and 1957's The Cranes are Flying, two beautiful, sophisticated, and celebrated elegies to the individual and personal experiences of Russians during World War II. Russia's fight against the Nazi war machine cost that country 20 million lives. Ballad of a Soldier takes a simple premise — one young soldier's journey home to visit his mother — and shapes it into a polished lens. Through that lens Ballad projects those 20 million, and at the focal point burns a humane, non-dogmatic meditation on the incalculably tragic cost of war.

The year is 1942. Soviet forces are retreating from the Nazi armies. The last survivor of a platoon, 19-year-old Alyosha (Vladimir Ivashov) is on the run from a German armored division. Thanks as much to luck as bravery or skill, the desperate soldier single-handedly takes out two tanks. His conduct on the battlefield makes him a hero, but instead of a medal he requests the rare privilege of enough leave-time to visit his mother and repair her leaking roof. His home village is a day away at peacetime; during wartime chaos the journey will be longer. His general rewards him with six days — two to get there, two to visit, two to return. Although Alyosha is in a great hurry, he does not refuse to help those in need. A boy of good nature, sensitive and honest and not yet eroded by life, he gives comfort to an embittered, legless veteran afraid to return to his wife in his present state. He delivers cakes of soap (a precious wartime gift) from a fellow soldier to his wife — only to fine that she has taken up with another man. He shares his meager property with others in need, notably a young woman, Shura (Zhanna Prokhorenko), a fellow stowaway on an army freight train. Clearly a victim of recent abuse, Shura at first distrusts Alyosha to the point of almost leaping from the train speeding through the ravaged countryside. Eventually newfound trust turns to mutual tenderness, then to love. In an ideal world, the couple would be fated to journey hand in hand throughout long and happy lives together. But this isn't an ideal world, and Alyosha reaches home just in time to hug his mother and say goodbye.

We are told at the outset that Alyosha is killed at the front, never to return to his mother, to Shura, or to anyone else again. Ballad of a Soldier's conclusion strikes a single, clear tone with one of the most poignant of wartime questions — what if? What if Alyosha, decent and honorable and deserving of a full life, had not died in the war? What could he, and by extension some 20 million Alyoshas, have become? What could this everyday hero have contributed if he'd been allowed to fulfill his promise? Ballad doesn't answer the question. Instead it tells us that Alyosha dies a "simple Russian soldier" (a citizen of a country, not an ideology) because he never had the time or opportunity to be anything else.

Technically rich yet possessing a refining simplicity, Ballad of a Soldier is a quietly powerful work that could have diminished into soapy melodrama or government-stamped rhetoric. Instead, director/co-writer Grigori Chukhrai delivered a personal ode, one indeed as emotive and straight-shooting as a ballad, to his own postwar generation. He did so with then-distinctive attention to varying responses war brings out in individual people, with moments of unmistakable (and now sweetly chaste) sexual heat, and without resorting to the clichés, stilted symbols, or pompous phraseology that did so much harm to Soviet cinema. If handsome, virtuous Alyosha is an idealized emblem of the Soviet character, it's to the degree that, say, Jimmy Stewart or John Wayne personified America's images of itself. Ballad is artful without being at all inaccessible, and every element — cinematography, sound, and especially the performances of the two extraordinary actors playing Alyosha and Shura — is as energetic and sharply honed as any of the best Hollywood or Western European product.

During the early '60s, when Kruschev supported a brief thaw in Cold War tensions, Ballad triumphantly toured the international festival circuit. It was (and is) hailed as a gem-like representative of the period's "new Soviet cinema," and for Russians it became one of their most beloved movies while also earning awards in Cannes, San Francisco, London, Tehran, and Milan before winning the Lenin Prize at home. In 1962 it was Oscar-nominated for Best Writing (Story and Screenplay) and won the British Academy Award for Best Film From Any Source. Our vantage-point several decades later allows us a broader view of Ballad's resonant theme. What might writer-director Grigori Chukhrai or the previously unknown acting students — Zhanna Prokhorenko (who's as lovely and soulful as Ingrid Bergman in her prime) and Vladimir Ivashov (one of the best leading men Hollywood never had) — have achieved if politics and circumstances had permitted greater artistic back-and-forth between the U.S. and Soviet film industries? There's of course no answer for that, though this release of Ballad of a Soldier hints at what might have been.


Ballada o soldate / Ballad of a Soldier (1959) [The Criterion Collection #148]

Ballada o soldate / Ballad of a Soldier (1959) [The Criterion Collection #148]

Ballada o soldate / Ballad of a Soldier (1959) [The Criterion Collection #148]

Ballada o soldate / Ballad of a Soldier (1959) [The Criterion Collection #148]

Ballada o soldate / Ballad of a Soldier (1959) [The Criterion Collection #148]

Ballada o soldate / Ballad of a Soldier (1959) [The Criterion Collection #148]

Ballada o soldate / Ballad of a Soldier (1959) [The Criterion Collection #148]


Ballada o soldate / Ballad of a Soldier (1959) [The Criterion Collection #148]


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Ballada o soldate / Ballad of a Soldier (1959) [The Criterion Collection #148]



General
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Format : Matroska
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File size : 5.64 GiB
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Movie name : Ballad.of.a.Soldier.1959.720.BluRay.DD5.1.x264-LolHD
Encoded date : UTC 2014-03-31 18:01:52
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Language : Russian
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Menu
00:00:00.000 : en:Chapter 01
00:08:09.489 : en:Chapter 02
00:14:30.870 : en:Chapter 03
00:21:58.317 : en:Chapter 04
00:28:28.707 : en:Chapter 05
00:37:16.234 : en:Chapter 06
00:46:02.760 : en:Chapter 07
00:53:32.209 : en:Chapter 08
01:02:45.762 : en:Chapter 09
01:10:58.254 : en:Chapter 10
01:17:56.672 : en:Chapter 11
01:22:50.966 : en:Chapter 12


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