One Hundred Days After Childhood

One Hundred Days After Childhood
Original Polish film poster
Directed by Sergei Solovyov
Written by Sergei Solovyov
Aleksandr Aleksandrov
Starring Boris Tokarev
Cinematography Leonid Kalashnikov
Release date
  • 1975 (1975)
Running time
89 minutes
Country Soviet Union
Language Russian

One Hundred Days After Childhood (Russian: Сто дней после детства, translit. Sto dney posle detstva) is a 1975 Soviet romance film directed by Sergei Solovyov. It was entered into the 25th Berlin International Film Festival where Solovyov won the Silver Bear for Best Director.[1]

Plot

Pioneer leader Serge, sculptor, decides to work with new plastic material - creatively gifted children, resting in the camp located in an old mansion. Pioneer Lopuhin is so in love with his classmate Ergolina that he does not notice how fascinated Sonia Zagremuhina is by him. Showing their emotions and moods helps their participation in the production of the play "Masquerade" by Lermontov, and the play itself imperceptibly turns into a drama with unexpected confessions, insults, jealousy, outbursts. The teens are so busy with their feelings that they do not pay attention to the pedagogical ideas of Pioneer Serge, and by the end of the film they without any special encouragement are ready to become a commemoration of first love.

Cast

  • Boris Tokarev - Mitya Lopuhin
  • Tatyana Drubich - Lena Ergolina
  • Irina Malysheva - Sonya Zagremuhina
  • Yuri Agilin - Gleb Lunev
  • Sergey Shakurov - Seryozha
  • Andrei Zvyagin - Lebedev
  • Sergey Khlebnikov - Radist
  • Nina Menshikova - Kseniya
  • Yuri Sorkin - Furikov
  • Tatyana Yurinova - Zalikova
  • Arina Alejnikova - Doctor

References

  1. "Berlinale 1975: Prize Winners". berlinale.de. Retrieved 2010-07-13.
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