Time, Forward! | |
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Directed by |
Sofiya Milkina Mikhail Shveytser |
Written by |
Valentin Kataev Mikhail Shveytser |
Starring |
Sergei Yursky Leonid Kuravlyov Inna Gulaya |
Music by | Georgy Sviridov |
Cinematography |
Naum Ardashnikov Yuri Gantman |
Production
company |
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Release date
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Running time
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158 minutes |
Country | Soviet Union |
Language | Russian |
Time, Forward! (Russian: Время, вперёд!, Vremya, vperyod!) is a 1965 Soviet drama film directed by Sofiya Milkina and Mikhail Shveytser based on a novel with the same name and a screenplay by Valentin Katayev. The film was produced by Mosfilm, a unit of the State Committee for Cinematography (Goskino). The famous musical score was composed by Georgy Sviridov.
The title is derived from Vladimir Mayakovsky's play Banya (Russian: Баня).
The film is set in the 1930s, depicting one day of the construction work of Magnitogorsk Iron and Steel Works (or Magnitka). The characters are construction workers and Komsomol members who are eager to work. Learning that their colleagues in Kharkov have set a record, they are mobilized in order to beat them. Everyone at the construction site has embraced socialist competition. They are ready to win at any cost to speed up construction and complete the work on time. A Moscow journalist comes to cover the scope of the great construction project, seeking a hero for his story.
Sviridov's orchestral suite written for this film was one of the most recognizable music pieces of the Soviet era, and became a sort of calling card for the Soviet Union itself. Since 1986 it has been used as the theme song of Vremya, the TV news program on USSR Central Television and Russian Channel One (although the tune has been re-orchestrated a few times since then). It was also used as the opening theme for the four-part Channel 4 documentary Spitfire Ace in Great Britain.