CINE World (Aug 1967)

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of his childhood. Critics noted the grave; thoughtful, unchildlike acting of little Kolya Burlyayev as Ivan, and the original photography of Vadim Yusov. This picture won awards in Venice and San Francisco. Director Danelia’s ‘| Walk in Moscow” is full of fun and charm. The song written for it by Andrei Petrov has become popular with young people in Italy, France and other countries as well. After ‘‘Seryozha”, Talankin filmed ‘’Starting Out’’, another picture about childhood and youth, based on a story by Vera Panova. The very youngest group of directors includes Mikhail Bogin, Mikhail Kobakhidze, and Pavel Lyubimov, who have given us “The Two”, “The Wedding”, ““The Lady with the Violets’’, and ‘“Women’’. These are true, honest pictures, inspired by a humanistic conception of life. This gorup will not be the youngest for long, for every year the USSR Cinema Institute gives Soviet films new directors, actors, camera-men and screen-writers. It is gratifying to see with what giant steps the studios of the other Union republics are developing in the USSR. Let us speak first about the Kiev Studio, in the Ukraine, where Alexander Dovzhenko once worked. Here they remember, cherish and develop the traditions he founded. Not long ago audiences applauded the Kiev Studio’s ‘Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors”, made by director Sergei Parajanov and camera-man Yuri Ilvenko, after the story by the Ukrainian classic Mikhail Kotsyubinsky. It shows a wealth of poetic imagination, originality, and artistic feeling. The Georgian Studio’s ’’A Soldier’s Father’, directed by Rezo Chkheidze and starring Sergo Zakariadze, scored a great success at the Fourth International Film Festival in Moscow. Zakariadze’s performance is one of the most outstanding events of recent years. The Lithuanian Studio has put out a series of fine films recently, among them “’Living Heroes”, “The Girl and the Echo”, “Chronicle of One Day”, and, last but not least, ‘Nobody Wanted to Die”, directed by Vitautas Zalakevicus. This film boldly declares that each individual must share the responsibility for what takes place around him. Both the Kirghiz film ‘‘Heat’’, an adaptation of Chinghiz Aitmatov’s story, directed by Larissa Shepitko, and the Turkmenian film ‘’Contest’’, directed by Bulat Mansurov, were awarded international prizes. Ta EER Continued on Page 26 6