Sporting Honour

Sporting Honour
Directed by Vladimir Petrov
Written by Nikolay Erdman
Mikhail Volpin
Starring Aleksei Gribov
Grigori Sergeyev
Margarita Lifanova
Music by Matvei Blanter
Cinematography Yuli Kun
Mark Magidson
Vladimir Yakovlev
Edited by Klavdiya Moskvina
Production
company
Release date
11 June 1951
Running time
107 minutes
Country Soviet Union
Language Russian

Sporting Honour (Russian: Спортивная честь) is a 1951 Soviet sports film directed by Vladimir Petrov and starring Aleksei Gribov, Grigori Sergeyev and Margarita Lifanova. It was awarded the Stalin Prize, although political objections had delayed its release.[1]

Plot

Worker of the Ural plant Vetlugin becomes a member of the Moscow football team 'Turbina'. Known to the whole country captain and center striker Vitaly Grinko is jealous of the newcomer and tries to discredit the simple-minded football player. The whole team takes the newcomer's side, criticizes the behavior of the captain, and in the game with the foreign team wins.

Cast

References

  1. Freedman p.192

Bibliography

  • Freedman, John. Silence's roar: the life and drama of Nikolai Erdman. Mosaic Press, 1992.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.