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Ballad of a Soldier

Original title: Ballada o soldate
  • 1959
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 28m
IMDb RATING
8.2/10
12K
YOUR RATING
Ballad of a Soldier (1959)
DramaRomanceWar

Young Russian soldier Alyosha earns a medal, but asks to visit his mother instead. His journey recounts various kinds of love during wartime.Young Russian soldier Alyosha earns a medal, but asks to visit his mother instead. His journey recounts various kinds of love during wartime.Young Russian soldier Alyosha earns a medal, but asks to visit his mother instead. His journey recounts various kinds of love during wartime.

  • Director
    • Grigoriy Chukhray
  • Writers
    • Grigoriy Chukhray
    • Valentin Yezhov
  • Stars
    • Vladimir Ivashov
    • Zhanna Prokhorenko
    • Antonina Maksimova
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.2/10
    12K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Grigoriy Chukhray
    • Writers
      • Grigoriy Chukhray
      • Valentin Yezhov
    • Stars
      • Vladimir Ivashov
      • Zhanna Prokhorenko
      • Antonina Maksimova
    • 84User reviews
    • 27Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 6 wins & 4 nominations total

    Photos111

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    Top cast49

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    Vladimir Ivashov
    Vladimir Ivashov
    • Alyosha Skvortsov
    • (as Volodya Ivashov)
    Zhanna Prokhorenko
    Zhanna Prokhorenko
    • Shura
    Antonina Maksimova
    Antonina Maksimova
    • Katerina (Alyosha's Mother)
    Nikolay Kryuchkov
    Nikolay Kryuchkov
    • The General
    Evgeniy Urbanskiy
    Evgeniy Urbanskiy
    • Vasya (The Invalid)
    Elza Lezhdey
    Elza Lezhdey
    • Liza (The Invalid's Wife)
    Aleksandr Kuznetsov
    Aleksandr Kuznetsov
    • Gavrilkin (The Train Sentry)
    Evgeniy Teterin
    Evgeniy Teterin
    • The Lieutenant ('A terrible beast')
    Valentina Markova
    • Zoya (Skvortsovs' neighbor)
    Mariya Kremneva
    Mariya Kremneva
    • Elizaveta Petrovna (Pavlov's Wife)
    • (as M. Kremnnyova)
    Vladimir Pokrovskiy
    Vladimir Pokrovskiy
    • Vasiliy Egorovich (Pavlov's father)
    Georgiy Yumatov
    Georgiy Yumatov
    • The Driver
    Gennadiy Yukhtin
    Gennadiy Yukhtin
    • Seryozha Pavlov
    Valentina Telegina
    Valentina Telegina
    • Old Woman Truck Driver
    Lev Borisov
    Lev Borisov
    • The Soldier (Pavlov's Buddy)
    Leonid Chubarov
    Leonid Chubarov
    • Sergeant Major Mos'ko
    Vladimir Kashpur
    Vladimir Kashpur
    • Ryaboy
    Valentin Abramov
    Valentin Abramov
    • Joking Soldier in Train
    • Director
      • Grigoriy Chukhray
    • Writers
      • Grigoriy Chukhray
      • Valentin Yezhov
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews84

    8.211.9K
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    Featured reviews

    9mik-19

    Clutching at your heart-strings

    Alyosha, a 19-year old private in the Soviet army, more or less by accident neutralizes three German tanks and is allowed to return home to see his mother and fix her roof on a six-day leave. On a train he meets another stow-away, the timid Shura, and falls in love. The movie depicts the people he meets on his way home through war-torn Russia.

    This is an amazing film, a kind of shaggy-dog story and one you are not liable to forget. It is so extremely well-paced in a natural, flowing rhythm with a smooth, unassuming camera and lovely lighting. Be that all is it may, whatever the film's affinities with Pudovkin masterpieces such as 'Earth' and 'Deserter', 'Ballad of a Soldier' is all heart, empathy and sincerity, and it will clutch at your heart-strings.

    The boy is not yet jaded in the grown-up fashion, and the people he meets stir him into immediate sympathy, Alyosha is simply one of the most likable characters you will encounter in a film, without being trite or cutesy. And the people he meets are hardly ever as sympathetic as he is, witness private Pavlov's girlfriend, whom Alyosha promised to bring the soap as a gift. When he gets there, she has a lover visiting her, and although Alyosha judges her, the film itself does not. Its description of budding young love is enchanting, but it has, finally, its own bitter irony.

    Watch this whenever you get the chance. Do not let prejudice about what you think Soviet cinema is like detain you.
    9rooprect

    "A single death is a tragedy; a million deaths is a statistic."

    "A single death is a tragedy; a million deaths is a statistic" is the famous quote by Stalin. In this movie we see a marvellous illustration of the sentiment.

    Don't worry; I didn't spoil anything. We learn from the opening narration that this is the story of a fallen hero. With that in mind, the atmosphere of impending tragedy colours the entire film despite the film's rather charming presentation. It's a wonderful irony, because the director opens with such a powerful & nihilistic statement, but then he follows with a sweet and inspiring presentation which you might even call "innocent".

    I'm not exactly a fan of war movies, but I don't consider this to be one at all. There are very few details about the war, no politics, no propaganda. Essentially you can replace the Russian uniforms with British, German or Japanese, and the story would remain the same--"The Ballad of a Soldier". Oddly enough, it's the compelling portrayal of rustic life (which he encounters along his journey) that provides the backbone and theme of this film, a very human story.

    It reminds me of the Italian classic "Bicycle Thieves" as well as the Japanese masterpiece "Ikuru" by Kurosawa. Each scene packs a lot of heart, and the grand finale brings it all together poetically and artistically. I won't mention any names, but I sure wish certain other artsy Russian directors could be as lucid and authentic in their presentations.

    One more thing... I can't end this review without mentioning the SUPERB MUSIC. The composer is listed as Mihkail Ziv, but IMDb offers no biographical info on him. The melody is powerful and epic while being traditional and intimate at the same time. It really mirrors the theme of the film perfectly: things of great importance come in simple packages.

    This movie gets 9 stars from me, which is about the highest rating I ever give. See it if you ever get the chance.
    10FilmCriticLalitRao

    Argentinian cinéaste Eliseo Subiela and his father wept inconsolably after watching this humanist masterpiece.

    In the 1950s, 2 very critically acclaimed Russian films were made. The first film was "The cranes are flying" by Mikhail Kolotozov. It is true that it was a good film but it was more of a love story. If there is a film which all human beings must watch, it is "Ballad of a soldier" made by the great Russian cinéaste Grigori Chukrai. I still have vivid memories of this film, although I saw it in 1986 on India's only public television network called "Doordarshan". What I like the most about this film is that it has tremendous emotional power to move anyone regardless of that person's ideologies or beliefs. It talks of war without begging for kindness, mercy or pity. Such is the greatness of this masterpiece. In my opinion," Ballad of a soldier" is not only the greatest Russian film ever made, it is one of the greatest world cinema gems too. For those who have not yet seen it, one word of advice. Throw away all your Hollywood flicks and watch this humanist masterpiece. PS :10 out of 10 is a understatement. "Ballad of a soldier" would easily fetch 100 out of 10.
    10CharlieA-2

    This is a most powerful, and positive, statement against war.

    Gregori Chukhrai makes a very powerful, and poignant protest against the horror and futility of war. There is no whining, no accusing, only a very real, and believable, look at the effect that it has on some very ordinary people. People that each of us can relate to. I have to classify this as my all time favorite war movie. If you have a choice, watch it with the Russian language, and subtitles. The warmth is missing in the overdubbed voices, in the dubbed version. Although my Russian is as limited as possible, the emotion that is portrayed by the vocalizations of the actors, is powerful. One is certain to fall in love with either Vladimir Ivashov, or Zhanna Prokhorenko. This is one of those rare films, that each time one watches it, one gleans more from it, and feels that much closer to the film, the director/writer, and to the actors.
    dougdoepke

    Not a Tractor in Sight

    Comedians used to poke fun at Soviet movies during the Cold War era. The claim was that every Soviet film could be characterized by a single standard plot line—"Boy meets tractor, Boy falls in love with tractor, Boy marries tractor". Now, I'm not sure how accurate the wags were since Soviet films were never shown here, nor ours there. But, given Soviet emphasis on collective farming, and their theory that art should follow politics, that sort of result wouldn't be surprising.

    Nonetheless, Soviet-made or not, this 1959 humanist gem shines like a proverbial pearl in the night. Sure, the boy and girl are idealized, but were there ever two more charming performers; they even look alike. Moreover, it's that natural glow amidst the seediest surroundings that suggests what some might call a triumph of the human spirit. After years of slickly contrived Hollywood pairings, I was captivated by a warmth and chemistry seemingly so unforced and unrehearsed that I marvel at how it was done. In my book, it's one of the great compelling love stories of the big screen.

    Just as importantly, the movie is anti-war, but subtly so. We do see some devastation and combat, but the real indictment lies elsewhere. It rests with all the potentials cut short by unrelenting demands of the war machine. The boy must return to his unit or risk being shot as a deserter. Thus he must abandon the injured soldier with whom he could have been friends; he must risk losing the love of his life because trains must run on wartime; he must leave his mother, without even time to fix the leaky roof. But most of all, war demands that he, like so many fine young men, must leave life with a personal potential that will go tragically unrealized. As one of Chukrai's effects brilliantly illustrates, war is indeed a world turned upside down.

    Also, there are the stunning visuals. Those vast Russian steppes may be flat and boring. Nonetheless, the corresponding big sky makes a magnificent backdrop for heroic low-angle shots of those dwelling amidst the vastness. Then there's that long dusty road at film's end, leading off into a great unknown that Alyosha must now travel. In contrast are the teeming crowds at the railway station, looking nothing like Hollywood in their simple cloth dresses and shirts. And what concern with fancy hair-do's can the women have when their hair is bound down with knotted kerchiefs. All in all, it's a revealing look at what could be called the Russian peasantry of the time.

    No, the movie clearly doesn't come from the ministry of propaganda. Still, there are concessions. Note how cooperative strangers become no matter how initially cranky they are. The army officers especially are portrayed as understanding and non-threatening. Nobody is depicted negatively, except maybe the disloyal wife. Not even the Nazi enemy responsible for 20 million Russian dead is mentioned, let alone, vilified. No, the real antagonist here is war itself; the point is not stated, but it is shown to an uncommonly moving degree. The dedication at film's end may be to the Russian soldier, but the subtext throughout aims at the universal, regardless of time, place, or nationality.

    Thus 50 years later, the movie remains a timeless humanist classic. And with it, I think Chukrai deserves a place alongside the early masters of Soviet film, that is, before the Stalinist tyranny descended. Now, I have nothing against tractors. In fact, I wish Hollywood would feature more such life-affirming inventions than the exploding cars they so love and worship. Nonetheless, I guess I'm glad that here, there's not a single tractor in sight.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance
    Band of Brothers (2001)
    War

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The can of meat the train guard is eating from was clearly marked: "U.S. Meat". This would have been correct in actual life due the United States' Lend Lease with the Soviet Union.
    • Goofs
      The movie is set in July 1942 (a news report over loudspeakers mentions a Soviet retreat from Rostov and Voronezh). Yet the film depicts German Tiger and Soviet T 34/85 tanks, which came into service, respectively, in mid 1943 and early 1944.
    • Quotes

      Alyosha Skvortsov: Comrade General, instead of my decoration, could I go home to see my mother?

    • Connections
      Featured in Fejezetek a film történetéböl: A szovjet film 1953-1970 (1990)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 26, 1960 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • Soviet Union
    • Official site
      • Movie on okko.tv
    • Languages
      • Russian
      • Ukrainian
    • Also known as
      • Balada o vojniku
    • Filming locations
      • Mosfilm Studios, Moscow, Russia(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Mosfilm
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 28m(88 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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