A bitter anti-Nazi film, "The Rainbow" details the sufferings of a Ukrainian village during 30 days of occupation.A bitter anti-Nazi film, "The Rainbow" details the sufferings of a Ukrainian village during 30 days of occupation.A bitter anti-Nazi film, "The Rainbow" details the sufferings of a Ukrainian village during 30 days of occupation.
- Awards
- 1 win
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Natalya Uzhviy
- Olena Kostyuk
- (as N. Uzhviy)
Nina Alisova
- Pusya
- (as N. Alisova)
Elena Tyapkina
- Feodosya
- (as E. Tyapkina)
Valentina Ivashova
- Olga
- (as V. Ivasheva)
Anton Dunaysky
- Grandfather Evdokim Okhabko
- (as A. Dunayskiy)
Anna Lisyanskaya
- Malyuchikha
- (as A. Lisyanskaya)
Hans Klering
- Captain Kurt Werner
- (as G. Klering)
Nikolai Bratersky
- Gaplik
- (as N. Braterskiy)
Vladimir Chobur
- Lt. Kravchenko
- (as V. Chobur)
Viktor Vinogradov
- Mishka, Malyuchikha's child
- (as Vitya Vinogradov)
Emma Malaya
- Malyuchikha's child
- (as Emma Perelshteyn)
Vladimir Ponomaryov
- Malyuchikha's child
- (as Vova Ponomaryov)
Dmitriy Kapka
- German soldier
- (uncredited)
Yelizaveta Khutornaya
- Grokhachikha
- (uncredited)
Storyline
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Featured review
Characters in this low-quality propaganda-movie are so phony they're not characters at all, just living cartoons with stock personalities: the wicked Germans, the male collaborator, the female collaborator-concubine, the enduring villagers, the patriotic Orthodox priest, the innocent children, the conscious female teacher, the partisans.
The script is so childish you think it was meant for 5-year-olds or maybe for a village public that had never seen a motion picture in their life. The only moments my resigned boredom was interrupted was when one or two points where naivety touched comical levels caused amused giggles among the public (including me).
The director, Mark Donskoy, has shot The Childhood of Maxim Gorky and The horse that Cried, which, although not special, are passable movies. But here he has really touched bottom.
The script is so childish you think it was meant for 5-year-olds or maybe for a village public that had never seen a motion picture in their life. The only moments my resigned boredom was interrupted was when one or two points where naivety touched comical levels caused amused giggles among the public (including me).
The director, Mark Donskoy, has shot The Childhood of Maxim Gorky and The horse that Cried, which, although not special, are passable movies. But here he has really touched bottom.
- enaskitis-1
- Feb 11, 2014
- Permalink
Details
- Runtime1 hour 27 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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