There Will Be No Leave Today

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There Will Be No Leave Today

Title card of There Will Be No Leave Today
Directed by Aleksandr Gordon
Andrei Tarkovsky
Written by Aleksandr Gordon
I. Makhov
Andrei Tarkovsky
Starring Oleg Borisov
Leonid Kuravlyov
Stanislav Lyubshin
Release date(s) 1959 (1959) (USSR)
Running time 46 min
Country Flag of the Soviet Union USSR
Language Russian
IMDb profile

There Will be No Leave Today (Russian: Сегодня увольнения не будет, Sevodnya uvolnyeniya nye budyet) is a 1959 student film by the Russian film director Andrei Tarkovsky and his fellow student Aleksandr Gordon. The film is about members of the Soviet army during a time of peace. It was Tarkovsky's second film, produced while being a student at the State Institute of Cinematography (VGIK).

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[edit] Plot

In an unnamed town construction workers find an old cache of bombs of World War II. An army unit is dispateched to dispose the bombs. As exploding the bombs would inflict heavy damage on the town the army unit has to transport the bombs in a risky mission manually to a safe site.

After the entire town is evacuated, the soldiers carry the bombs one by one to the safe site. Some of the bombs nearly explode, and in one scene an heroic soldier grabs a bomb and jumps from a truck to save the other soldiers. The film ends with the popoulation returning to the town and the simultaneous explosion of the bombs at the safe site.

[edit] Background

Untypically for Tarkovsky the film resembles a Soviet propaganda film, with heroic soldiers and the grateful population of the town. Contrary to Tarkovsky's other student film The Killers, this film had a relatively high budget. The budget was partly provided by Soviet television as the film was to be aired on the anniversary day of the capitulation of Nazi Germany in World War II. The higher budget allowed for professional actors in the main roles, such as Oleg Borisov, Leonid Kuravlyov and Stanislav Lyubshin. Furthermore, the army provided some support in the form of military equipment and troops as extras. The film was shot in Kursk over a period of three months. Editing took another three months.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Blasco, Gonzalo (November 10, 2003). An Interview with Marina Tarkovskaia and Alexander Gordon. www.andreitarkovski.org. Retrieved on 2007-12-10.

[edit] External links