A Girl with Guitar

A Girl with Guitar (Russian: Девушка с гитарой) is 1958 Soviet musical comedy film directed by Alexander Feinzimmer.

A Girl with Guitar
Directed byAlexander Feinzimmer
Written byBoris Laskin, Vladimir Polyakov
StarringLyudmila Gurchenko
Mikhail Zharov
Faina Ranevskaya
Music byYury Saulsky
Arkady Ostrovsky
Production
company
Release date
  • September 1, 1958 (1958-09-01)
[1]
Running time
93 minutes
CountrySoviet Union
LanguageRussian

After the success of the film Carnival Night starring Lyudmila Gurchenko the script of the film A Girl with a Guitar was written counting on her popularity.[2][1]

The film was shot on the eve of the 6th World Festival of Youth and Students, held in Moscow in the summer of 1957, and became the first Soviet feature film dedicated to this significant event.[1][3] The film premiered on September 1, 1958.

The film was a success with the audience. At the end of the year, А Girl with Guitar took the tenth place in the attendance rating, gathering over 31.9 million viewers,[3] although it could not repeat the success of Carnival Night.[1]

Plot

Pretty salesgirl of the music store Tanya Fedosova (Lyudmila Gurchenko) dreams of becoming an actress. She often sings. There are always a lot of customers around her. But they annoy the shop director (Mikhail Zharov), who is afraid of losing a valuable employee. He tries to prevent the possible career of Tanya, who has all the data to become an actress. Acquaintance of the girl with the young composer (Vladimir Gusev) helps her dream to come true.

Cast

according to kino-teatr.ru[4]

Critical reception

Official Soviet criticism met the film with hostility: "Another Girl", "To the light genre by the… easy way", "Dangerous roll", "In captivity of bad taste" said headlines of Soviet newspapers.[1] Gurchenko gained a reputation the actress of the lung and musical genre.[5]

This film was the debut for Yuri Nikulin. He performed episodic role of the unlucky pyrotechnics so vividly that both the spectators and the directors immediately turned their attention to the novice actor.[1]

Ronald Bergan from The Guardian described the film as "bouncy, colour musical full of spectacular numbers, in which Gurchenko plays a pretty young clerk in a Moscow music shop, who sings several songs enchantingly".[6]

References

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