Eternal Call
Eternal Call (Russian: Вечный зов, romanized: Vechnyy zov) was a Soviet 1973–1983 epic TV series directed by Vladimir Krasnopolsky and Valery Uskov by the eponymous novel of Anatoli Ivanov shot by Mosfilm.[1]
Plot
The series traces the fates of a Siberian family of Savelyevs since 1906 into 1960s, including three wars, Russian Revolution, establishment of the Soviet power, epoch of Stalinism, etc.[2]
Cast
- Savelievs
- Pyotr Lyubeshkin as Silanty Savelyev, head of the family
- Vladimir Borisov as Semyon
- Tamara Degtyaryova as Agatha
- Vladimir Zemlyanikin as Grigory
- Nikolai Ivanov as Ivan
- Nikolai Lebedev as Mitrofan
- Ada Rogovtseva as Anna (nee Kaftanova)
- Aleksei Serebryakov as Dima
- Vadim Spiridonov as Fyodor
- Valeri Khlevinsky as Anton
- Others
- Tamara Syomina as Anfisa
- Oleg Basilashvili as Arnold Mikhailovich Lakhnovsky, officer of the tsarist secret police, later an officer of the Abwehr
- Pyotr Velyaminov as Polycarp Kruzhilin
- Zinaida Vorkul as Markovna
- Vladimir Zamansky as Fyodor Nechayev
- Boris Ivanov as whiteguard general
- Mikhail Kokshenov as Arkady Molchun
- Yefim Kopelyan as Mikhail Lukich Kaftanov
- Vera Kuznetsova as Glafira Dementyevna
- Natalya Kustinskaya as Polina
- Ivan Lapikov as Pankrat Nazarov
- Rimma Markova as Vasilisa
- Andrey Martynov as Kiryan Inyutin
- Radner Muratov as Magomedov
- Olga Naumenko as Varya
- Leonid Kharitonov as Yegor
Awards
The series was awarded the USSR State Prize in the field of literature, art, and architecture.[3]
References
- Eternal Call at IMDb
- Eternal Call at the Encyclopedia of National Cinema (in Russian)
- В Башкирии разберут мост из фильма «Вечный зов» // Real Time
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