Glorious Path
Soviet Union film
- Boris Buneev
- Anatoli Rybakov
- Mikhail Shvejtser
- Aleksandr Antonov
- Aleksey Bakhar
- Sergey Bondarchuk
- Inna Fyodorova
- Georgi Gumilevsky
Glorious Path (Russian: Путь славы) is a 1949 Soviet film directed by Boris Buneev,[1] Anatoli Rybakov[2] and Mikhail Shvejtser.[3]
Plot
The film tells about a village girl Sasha Voronkova, moving to the city in the hope of realizing her dream: to become a train driver.[4]
Starring
- Aleksandr Antonov as Ivan Konstantinovich
- Aleksey Bakhar
- Sergey Bondarchuk as Sekretar gorkoma
- Inna Fyodorova
- Georgi Gumilevsky as Ded i hochnoy storozh
- Olesya Ivanova as Sasha Voronkova
- Viktor Khokhryakov as Ponomaryov
- G. Koryagin
- Muza Krepkogorskaya as Katya
- Leonid Kulakov as Samson Ivanovich
- Vasili Makarov as Kapitan
- Nadir Malishevsky as Kolya Makagon
- Grigory Mikhaylov
- Pyotr Savin as Normirovshchik
- Nina Savva
- Aleksandr Shirshov as Aleksey
- Zoya Tolbuzina
- Mikhail Troyanovskiy as Trofimych
- Vladimir Vladislavskiy as Kladovshchik
- Kira Zharkova[5]
References
External links
- Glorious Path at IMDb
- v
- t
- e
Films by Mikhail Schweitzer
- Glorious Path (1948)
- Other People's Relatives (1955)
- Sasha Enters Life (1957)
- Michman Panin (1960)
- Resurrection (1960)
- Time, Forward! (1965)
- The Golden Calf (1968)
- The Flight of Mr. McKinley (1975)
- Funny People (1977)
- Little Tragedies (1979)
- Dead Souls (1984)
- The Kreutzer Sonata (1987)
This article related to a Soviet film of the 1940s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e