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Zoia

Original title: Zoya
  • 1944
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
120
YOUR RATING
Galina Vodyanitskaya in Zoia (1944)
DramaWar

A popular, inspirational biography of a World War II Soviet heroine, showing her life in flashback as she is captured and tortured fighting the German invaders.A popular, inspirational biography of a World War II Soviet heroine, showing her life in flashback as she is captured and tortured fighting the German invaders.A popular, inspirational biography of a World War II Soviet heroine, showing her life in flashback as she is captured and tortured fighting the German invaders.

  • Director
    • Lev Arnshtam
  • Writers
    • Lev Arnshtam
    • Boris Chirskov
  • Stars
    • Galina Vodyanitskaya
    • Yekaterina Skvortsova
    • Kseniya Tarasova
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    120
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Lev Arnshtam
    • Writers
      • Lev Arnshtam
      • Boris Chirskov
    • Stars
      • Galina Vodyanitskaya
      • Yekaterina Skvortsova
      • Kseniya Tarasova
    • 1User review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Photos3

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    Top cast21

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    Galina Vodyanitskaya
    Galina Vodyanitskaya
    • Zoya Kosmodem'yanskaya
    Yekaterina Skvortsova
    • Zoya as a child
    • (as Katya Skvortsova)
    Kseniya Tarasova
    • Zoya's Mother
    • (as K. Tarasova)
    Nikolai Ryzhov
    • Zoya's Father
    • (as N. Ryzhov)
    Aleksandr Kuznetsov
    Aleksandr Kuznetsov
    • Boris Fomin
    • (as A. Kuznetsov)
    Boris Poslavsky
    Boris Poslavsky
    • Owl
    • (as B. Poslavskiy)
    Vladimir Volchik
    Vladimir Volchik
    • Komsomol Secretary
    • (as V. Volchek)
    Vera Popova
    • Hostess of the house
    • (as V. Popova)
    Tamara Altseva
    Tamara Altseva
    • Anna Sergeevna, Zoya's Teacher
    • (as T. Altseva)
    Zoya Zhukova
    • Zina, Zoya's classmate
    • (as Z. Zhukova)
    Nikolay Bogatyryov
    • Petya Vasilev
    • (as N. Bogatyryov)
    Vladimir Podgornyy
    • German Officer
    • (as V. Podgornyy)
    Rostislav Plyatt
    Rostislav Plyatt
    • German Soldier
    • (as R. Plyatt)
    Aleksey Batalov
    Aleksey Batalov
    • Alyosha Batalov, Zoya's classmate
    • (uncredited)
    Yekaterina Derevshchikova
    • Zoya's friend
    • (uncredited)
    Karl Gurnyak
    • Parisan
    • (uncredited)
    Olga Khorkova
    Olga Khorkova
    • Khorkova, Zoya's classmate
    • (uncredited)
    Vladimir Lippart
    Vladimir Lippart
    • German Soldier
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Lev Arnshtam
    • Writers
      • Lev Arnshtam
      • Boris Chirskov
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews1

    6.6120
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    Featured reviews

    7GianfrancoSpada

    Death of Life

    Few films encapsulate the fervent ideological purpose and aesthetic discipline of wartime Soviet cinema as potently as this 1944 film. Shot during the height of the Great Patriotic War, in a year when the Soviet Union had already emerged from its most perilous period but was still embroiled in bitter struggle, the film serves not only as a historical artifact but as an active instrument of cultural memory and moral instruction. It is a work born from urgency-crafted to both elevate and harden its audience-and it does so with a striking blend of visual austerity and emotional intensity. The film presents a poignant exploration of sacrifice, where the death of a young woman named Zoya-whose name literally means "life"-becomes a powerful symbol of both endurance and loss amid the brutal realities of war.

    Formally, the cinematography adheres to the sober style typical of Soviet war cinema of the period. There is a marked absence of visual ornamentation: compositions are spare, the lighting is hard-edged, and deep shadows frame moments of heightened ethical choice. This visual economy is deliberate. It anchors the film's ideological clarity and resists any temptation toward lyricism. Rather than pursuing psychological complexity, the film channels its energy into moral delineation. Each shot is part of a visual syntax whose purpose is to emphasize resolve, sacrifice, and duty.

    The sound design follows the same principle of focused utility. Music appears sparingly and only at moments when the narrative seeks to elevate individual suffering into a symbol of collective resistance. Far from providing emotional relief, the score acts as reinforcement of the ideological structure. It is neither subtle nor overbearing-it is precise. In this respect, the film invites comparison to The Unvanquished (Nepokoryonnye, 1945), which similarly mobilizes music not to induce feeling per se, but to underscore historical and moral gravitas. However, where The Unvanquished allows itself moments of expressive expansion, this film remains locked into a mode of ritualistic compression. The emotions are not explored-they are declared.

    What lends the film its singular intensity, however, is the central performance. The protagonist, portrayed with a stoic yet incandescent physicality, becomes a symbol not only of youthful resolve but of the Soviet ideal of heroism. The actor's control is meticulous: her gestures are minimal, her expressions chiseled rather than fluid, and her silences weighted with rhetorical significance. While the character's moral arc is fixed from the outset-this is not a film about change-it is rendered with such internal consistency that the viewer is not asked to believe her transformation, but to bear witness to her sanctification. There is an undeniable parallel here with The Commissar (Komissar, 1967), albeit produced in a very different political and aesthetic climate. Both films use a female figure to symbolize an idealized fusion of personal conviction and historical necessity, though in this earlier wartime film, the iconography is sharper, more absolute, and more brutally circumscribed.

    Editing is lean and functional, in keeping with the narrative's unbroken drive toward culmination. There are no subplots, no temporal digressions, and no psychological detours. The structure is linear, the rhythm unyielding. Every cut serves to accelerate the convergence between personal fate and national struggle. This formal rigidity is not a shortcoming-it is integral to the film's purpose. The film has no interest in suspense or surprise; its drama lies in inevitability. In this way, it diverges sharply from later treatments of wartime resistance, such as The Dawns Here Are Quiet (A zori zdes tikhie, 1972), which permits a wider emotional register and emphasizes individual backstories. This film, by contrast, reduces its protagonist to her function, and in doing so, elevates her to the level of myth.

    Production design reinforces this dialectic between realism and abstraction. Interiors-interrogation chambers, prison cells, military offices-are rendered with clinical simplicity. Exteriors, particularly scenes of occupation and confrontation, are starkly composed to maximize moral contrast. There is no interest in texture or atmospheric detail. Every space exists as a site of ideological contest. There is a notable absence of any depiction of ordinary life; the film excludes the civilian sphere unless it directly intersects with resistance. This monolithic focus enhances the film's rhetorical power, though it also renders it emotionally narrower than later films of the same subgenre.

    What makes the film particularly compelling is its historical specificity. Produced in 1944, at a time when Soviet cinema had become a vital component of state strategy-not merely to inspire but to canonize-the film reflects a transitional moment in the wartime narrative. The worst of the Nazi advance had been repelled, and now the Soviet Union was consolidating a narrative of triumphant sacrifice. The protagonist does not survive, but her death is portrayed as a form of transcendence, an entry into the civic pantheon. This is not a tragedy, nor is it martyrdom in the Christian sense-it is socialist apotheosis, carefully constructed to generate not pity, but emulation. The audience is not asked to grieve, but to affirm.

    Unlike Western films of the same year, which often use the war as a canvas for broader human dramas, this film remains doggedly focused. There is no romance, no private sorrow, no ambiguity of allegiance. Everything is public, everything is political. Yet within that ideological frame, the film achieves a formal clarity and emotional compression that grants it enduring cinematic value. It is not subtle, but it is exact. And within that exactitude lies its strength.

    Yet a more distanced viewing may find in the film a certain naivety in its propagandistic construction. The depiction of heroism-so absolute, so devoid of hesitation or contradiction-at times borders on the catechistic. This is not an unconscious naivety, but a structural one: both the script and the mise-en-scène are crafted to exclude ambiguity, to leave no room for moral or psychological greys. The protagonist is not portrayed as a human being in the fullest sense, but as an archetype; her suffering and death are not rendered as tragedy, but as fulfillment-inevitable, necessary, even redemptive. To a contemporary sensibility, accustomed to war narratives that explore complexity, inner conflict, or disillusionment, this ideological rigidity can create a certain emotional distance. The modern viewer, if not fully aligned with the symbolic code of the film, may find themselves less moved by the pathos of the character than by the formality of the gesture. And therein lies the paradox: the film's expressive power rests precisely on its refusal to entertain doubt.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Goofs
      The librarian's retelling of the Nazi book burning of 1933 is very incorrect. While the book burning took place in various places in Germany, it didn't happen all on one day. Furthermore: books by Leo Tolstoy and Fyodor Dostoyevski were not burned.
    • Quotes

      Zoya as a child: [to her mother about the recently dead people who got awarded by the Lenin medal] I don't understand: They died so they are not anymore. But they get awarded. How can you award someone who isn't anymore?

      Zoya's Mother: That's what it's about? You see, girl, they are heroes. They went up so high where nobody ever was. And many years will go by and people will still remember them, just as if they would be alive.

    • Connections
      Featured in Histoire(s) du cinéma: Les signes parmi nous (1999)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 22, 1944 (Soviet Union)
    • Country of origin
      • Soviet Union
    • Language
      • Russian
    • Also known as
      • Zoja
    • Production company
      • Soyuzdetfilm
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 35 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Galina Vodyanitskaya in Zoia (1944)
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