- Source: Encounter at the Elbe
Encounter at the Elbe (in Russian: Встреча на Эльбе, romanized: Vstrecha na Elbe) is a Soviet war film released in 1949 from Mosfilm, describing the conflict, spying, and collaboration between the Soviet Army advancing from the east and the U.S. Army advancing from the west. The two allied forces met each other for the first time on the River Elbe near the end of the World War II. This meeting occurred on April 25, 1945, which was usually remembered as “Elbe Day” in Western Bloc nations and as the "Encounter at the Elbe” in Eastern Bloc nations.
The film was directed by Grigori Aleksandrov, with music by Dmitri Shostakovich, which included “Yearning for the Homeland” (in Russian: Тоска по родине, the words by Yevgeny Dolmatovsky), that became popular at that time in the Eastern Bloc nations and among the leftists in the Western Bloc nations, including Japan.
Plot
In April 1945, in the German town of Altenstadt, divided by the Elbe River, the advancing Soviet forces meet the U.S. troops. The eastern part of the town becomes the Soviet occupation zone, while the western part is occupied by the Americans. The commanders of the Soviet and American sectors, Major Kuzmin and Major James Hill (a former schoolteacher before the war), maintain cordial relations as good neighbors. However, tensions rise as the Cold War begins to unfold.
General-businessman MacDermott organizes a systematic plundering of the territory occupied by the Allies, while in the Soviet sector, efforts are made to alleviate the suffering of the war-torn German civilians.
The town's mayor, distrustful of the Russians, flees from the eastern part to the western sector. However, outraged by the social and racial injustices in the American zone, he returns.
Meanwhile, in the Soviet occupation zone, a Nazi conspiracy organized by the Americans is uncovered. James Hill attempts to thwart the Nazis, remembering that they share a common enemy, but encounters a CIA emissary — a woman posing as a journalist. After the failure of the operation, she leaves Germany, promising Hill she will make him "a real American."
In the finale, Hill, now demoted, meets Kuzmin on a bridge over the Elbe; however, the bridge is symbolically raised.
Cast
Vladlen Davydov – Major (later Colonel) Kuzmin, Soviet military commander
Konstantin Nassonov – Maslov, military council member
Boris Andreyev – Sergeant Yegorkin
Lyubov Orlova – Journalist Janet Sherwood, an American agent
Mikhail Nazvanov – Gen. James Hill
Ivan Lyubeznov – Sergeant Harry Perebeynoga
Vladimir Vladislavsky – General McDermot
Faina Ranevskaya – Mrs. McDermot
Andrei Petrov – Soviet officer
Andrei Fajt – Nazi Schrank, hiding under the name of anti-fascist Krause
Yuri Yurovsky – Professor Otto Dietrich
Gennady Yudin – Kurt Dietrich
Erast Garin – Captain Tommy
Sergei Tsenin – Senator Woody
Viktor Kulakov – Ernst Shmetau
Lidiya Sukharevskaya – Elsa Shmetau
Nikolai Nikitich – Schultz
Rina Zelyonaya – female German with a bicycle
Harijs Avens – American
Yevgeny Kaluzhsky – General at the Embassy (uncredited)
Mikhail Vorobyov – episode (uncredited)
See also
Second World War
Eastern Front (World War II)
Elbe Day
References
External links
Encounter at the Elbe at IMDb
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Vstrecha na Elbe
- Andrei Fajt
- Lidiya Sukharevskaya
- Boris Andreyev (pemeran)
- Jerman Timur
- Encounter at the Elbe
- Elbe Day
- Lyubov Orlova
- Mikhail Nazvanov
- Torgau
- Maxim Shostakovich
- Yevgeny Dolmatovsky
- Violin Concerto No. 1 (Shostakovich)
- Suite for Jazz Orchestra No. 1 (Shostakovich)
- Faina Ranevskaya