Battle for Sevastopol

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Battle for Sevastopol (original ukr. title - 'Незламна')
Battle of Sevastopol 2015.jpg
Russian theatrical release poster
Directed by Serhiy Mokrytskyi
Produced by Nataliya Mokrytska
Egor Olesov
Written by Maksym Budarin
Maksym Dankevych
Leonid Korin
Egor Olesov
Starring Yulia Peresild
Joan Blackham
Yevgeny Tsyganov
Vitaliy Linetskiy
Music by Evgen Galperine
Cinematography Yuriy Korol
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release dates
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  • April 2015 (2015-04)
Running time
122 minutes
Country Ukraine - Russia
Language Russian, English, Ukrainian
Budget $5 million

Battle for Sevastopol (Ukrainian: "Незламна" "Indestructible"; Russian: "Битва за Севастополь") is a 2015 biographical film about Lyudmila Pavlichenko, a young Soviet Ukrainian who joined the Red Army to fight the Nazi invasion of the USSR and became one of the deadliest snipers in World War II. The film, a joint Ukrainian-Russian production, was released in both countries on April 2, 2015; its international premiere took place two weeks later at the Beijing International Film Festival.[1]

The film is directed by Serhiy Mokrytskyi and stars Yulia Peresild as Pavlichenko. In addition to Beijing, where Peresild was awarded Best Actress award, the film has also appeared at Cannes Film Festival.[2]

Plot

After the German invasion of the USSR, university student Lyudmila Pavlichenko becomes a fighter in the 25th Rifle Division. She fights in the Battle of Odessa and, eventually, the defense of Sevastopol. After 309 confirmed kills, she is sent to the United States to campaign for American support, and meets Eleanor Roosevelt (Joan Blackham).

The filmmakers have characterized the project as a psychological story about the issues facing women in combat. The film also has a prominent romance subplot.

Production

The filming began in 2012 after the first archive material devoted to Pavlichenko was examined. Serhiy Mokrytskyi, who is better known as a cinematographer, served as director; after his arrival, the plot was altered to more closely match Pavlichenko's life. During production, there was concern that the growing political tension between Russia and Ukraine. However, the film was released in both countries on the same day, in each country's own respective language.

References

External links