Take Aim
Take Aim | |
---|---|
Directed by | Igor Talankin |
Written by | Danil Granin |
Screenplay by | Igor Talankin, Danil Granin |
Starring | Sergei Bondarchuk |
Music by | Alfred Schnittke |
Cinematography | Naum Ardashnikov |
Production
company |
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Release dates
|
1 March 1975 |
Running time
|
158 minutes (combined) |
Country | Soviet Union East Germany |
Language | Russian, German, English |
Take Aim (Russian: Выбор цели; Vybor Tzeli) is a 1974 two-part Soviet film directed by Igor Talankin.
Plot
The film depicts the nuclear arms race that took place between all sides in the Second World War and the beginning of the Cold War. The first part centers on the war years, dealing with the Manhattan Project and the American effort to beat the Germans to the bomb, as well as with Stalin's decision that the USSR must have its own atomic project. The second part displays the Soviet post-war nuclear program. The plot deals mainly with the personal dilemmas facing all the scientists who worked on the atomic weapons.
Production
The film was produced solely by Mosfilm, without a direct participation of DEFA, and yet several East German actors were invited to play the German historical figures. Fritz Diez, who appeared as Hitler for the fifth time in his career, was given also the role of Otto Hahn.[1]
The producers faced a technical difficulty in a scene which contained a nuclear explosion. After several experiments, the special effects coordinator Samir Jaber - a Syrian citizen who worked for Mosfilm - decided to create the required sequence by trickling a drop of orange-tinted perfume into a watery solution of Aniline and filming it close up.[2]
Reception
The film won the 1975 Kishinev All-Union Film Festival Grand Prize. Talankin received the Silver Pyramide in the 1977 Cairo International Film Festival.[3]
Main cast
- Sergei Bondarchuk as Igor Kurchatov.
- Nikolai Volkoff as Abram Ioffe.
- Yakov Tripolski as Joseph Stalin.
- Nikolai Zasukhin as Vyacheslav Molotov.
- Mark Prudkin as Albert Einstein.
- Sergei Yursky as J. Robert Oppenheimer.
- Boris Ivanov as Leó Szilárd.
- Erich Gerberding as Leslie Groves.
- Fritz Diez as Otto Hahn/ Adolf Hitler.
- Horst Schulze as Werner Heisenberg.
- Siegfried Weiß as Niels Bohr .