To the young lieutenant Maleshkin the war is a minor obstacle, if compared to his personal battle to command his subordinates, while conducting an armored vehicle at the same time he's tryin... Read allTo the young lieutenant Maleshkin the war is a minor obstacle, if compared to his personal battle to command his subordinates, while conducting an armored vehicle at the same time he's trying to impress his superior Soviet officers who put him under extreme pressures, one after t... Read allTo the young lieutenant Maleshkin the war is a minor obstacle, if compared to his personal battle to command his subordinates, while conducting an armored vehicle at the same time he's trying to impress his superior Soviet officers who put him under extreme pressures, one after the other, fighting the German forces occupying Ukraine during World War II. Here's the sto... Read all
- Sanya Maleshkin - mladshiy leytenant
- (as A. Kononov)
- Mikhail Domeshek - Mishka - serzhant navodchik
- (as O. Borisov)
- Grisha Shcherbak - starshina
- (as V. Pavlov)
- Osip Byankin -yefreytor
- (as F. Odinokov)
- Bezzubtsev - kombat
- (as B. Tabarovskiy)
- polkovnik Day
- (as M. Gluzskiy)
- Timofey Vasilyevich Ovsyannikov - the political officer
- (as P. Lyubeshkin)
- polkovnik Basov
- (as V. Zubkov)
- Cheginichka - komandir samokhodki
- (as B. Arakelov)
- Pashkal Telenkov komandir samokhodki
- (as G. Kolushkin)
- kapitan Sergachyov
- (as P. Gorin)
- Selivanov - starshiy leytenant
- (as B. Sichkin)
- Gromykhalo - ryadovoy
- (as Yu. Dubrovin)
- Antonina Vasilyevna
- (as I. Zamotina)
Featured reviews
It's very easy to relate with young and impressionable lieutenant Maleshkin (Mikhail Kononov, good actor), a young adult with relative experience, enough to lead a small crew (a mechanic, an arms specialist and the pilot) of an armored tank, guys who are older than him and who always find ways to ignore his orders. He shouts with them cause that's the only way they obey him (not really, though), but deep down he wants to be like one of those commanders who find ways of being nice to his subordinates, a true leader. Maleshkin's situation is one of a kind. He fights three wars at the same time: with WWII going its course, German forces are marching through Ukraine (1), and the man's mission is to lead one of the many tanks in deadly combats, and besides dealing with a reckless crew (2), he's trying to look good with his superiors (3), some who are very skeptical of his leadership and others who fully believe he can be a disciplined officer and a great leader. His way to bring up the squad's morale: suicide and encouraging acts such as picking up a hand-grenade that one of his soldiers let it fall inside the vehicle without its pin.
The thing I loved the most about the movie was its simplicity with a thought-provoking story (sometimes, writers and directors can provide with those), very accessible it is in terms of presenting a quality story that doesn't linger for too long, well-acted, with some surprising humored scenes - it's almost a comedy - and exciting action sequences. But let's go to what it matters, the screenplay's achievement: a solid view on the difference between a leader and a boss, commander. Business marketers use those definitions at right and left to exhaustion when talking company's leaderships but I think this movie got it right. The first inspires his team, recognizes his errors; the other just demands, bullies, harasses, more concerned in the result than in the actions that led to it. And Maleshkin is a proof of both, in many scenes, and he's a good example that people can change from one to another under the most difficult and unthinkable situations. 9/10
Did you know
- TriviaIrina Zamotina's debut.
- Quotes
Alexander Alexandrovich Maleshkin: Calm down, Mishka, calm down. We musn't fail.
- Crazy creditsDedicated to the ones who fought in the 3rd Armored Army of Marshal Rybalko.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Znachit, nam tuda doroga (2025)
Details
- Runtime1 hour 30 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1