One-Two, Soldiers Were Going... Explained

One-Two, Soldiers Were Going...
Director:Leonid Bykov
Starring:Leonid Bykov
Vladimir Konkin
Music:Georgy Dmitriyev
Cinematography:Volodymyr Voytenko
Studio:Dovzhenko Film Studios
Runtime:87 minutes
Country:Soviet Union
Language:Russian

One-Two, Soldiers Were Going... (Russian: Аты-баты, шли солдаты...|Aty-baty, shli soldaty...) is a 1977 Soviet war film directed by Leonid Bykov.

Plot

A small station Podbednya no different from many other stations of the Soviet Union. During the great Patriotic war, there were fierce battles. And now here come the relatives of those who approached the Victory, but did not live up to it.

In the movie "One-Two, Soldiers Were Going..." shows two parallel storylines. The first develops in the mid-1970s, the second — in the spring of 1944. By the end of the movie lines are closed on the battlefield, which takes place on March 18, 1944 and the memory of which honor the audience on March 18, 1974.

Cast

References