Soldiers Were Going (Shli soldaty...): Difference between revisions
Soldiers Were Going (Shli soldaty...): Difference between revisions - Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Soldiers Were Going (Shli soldaty...): Difference between revisions
'''''Soldiers Were Going''''' (''Shli soldaty...'') is a Soviet 1959 (filmed 1958) historical movie directed by Leonid Trauberg. The story is set in October 1917. During the fraternization on Russian-German front soldiers of both armies were shelled by artillery. Two surviving Russians, accompanied by a German and a Russian nurse, move to Petrograd with a demand from frontline soldiers to the highest authorities to stop the war. After many troubles, they appear in Petrograd in the days of Russian revolution and join the Red Guards.
'''''Soldiers Were Going''''' (''Shli soldaty...'') is a Soviet 1959 (filmed 1958) historical movie directed by Leonid Trauberg. The story is set in October 1917. During the fraternization on Russian-German front soldiers of both armies were shelled by artillery. Two surviving Russians, Matvey Krylov ([[Sergey Bondarchuk]]) and Ilya Sorokin ([[Andrei Petrov]]), accompanied by a German soldier Jakob Hoffmann ([[Erast Garin]]) and a Russian nurse Olga Kartseva ([[Elza Lezhdey]]), move to Petrograd with a demand from frontline soldiers to the highest authorities to stop the war. After many troubles, they appear in Petrograd in the days of Russian revolution and join the Red Guards.
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= Trivia =
= Trivia =
== Holsters ==
== Holsters ==
[[File:Shli soldaty-Holsters-1.jpg|thumb|none|500px|General's adjutant carries a [[TT-33]] holster. His handgun is an FN Model 1900.]]
[[File:Shli soldaty-Holsters-1.jpg|thumb|none|500px|General's adjutant ([[Anatoli Chemodurov]]) carries a [[TT-33]] holster. His handgun is an FN Model 1900.]]
[[File:Shli soldaty-Holsters-2.jpg|thumb|none|500px|Yegor Mikhaylov carries a TT holster. His handgun is a Nagant M1895.]]
[[File:Shli soldaty-Holsters-3.jpg|thumb|none|500px|A German Lt. ([[Vladimir Kolchin]]) carries a TT holster. In this scene the holster is definitly empty but in next scene there is a pistol (supposedly Luger, see above) in it.]]
[[File:Shli soldaty-Holsters-2.jpg|thumb|none|500px|Yegor Mikhaylov ([[Mikhail Ulyanov]]) carries a TT holster. His handgun is a Nagant M1895.]]
Soldiers Were Going (Shli soldaty...) is a Soviet 1959 (filmed 1958) historical movie directed by Leonid Trauberg. The story is set in October 1917. During the fraternization on Russian-German front soldiers of both armies were shelled by artillery. Two surviving Russians, Matvey Krylov (Sergey Bondarchuk) and Ilya Sorokin (Andrei Petrov), accompanied by a German soldier Jakob Hoffmann (Erast Garin) and a Russian nurse Olga Kartseva (Elza Lezhdey), move to Petrograd with a demand from frontline soldiers to the highest authorities to stop the war. After many troubles, they appear in Petrograd in the days of Russian revolution and join the Red Guards.
The following weapons were used in the film Soldiers Were Going (Shli soldaty...):
In one scene Bolshevik soldier Yegor Mikhaylov (Mikhail Ulyanov) holds a Nagant M1895 revolver. In same scene a prison warden Ivan Petrovich (Georgiy Budarov) carries a Nagant in holster. A Nagant is also used by an Anarchist robber (uncredited).
Pistols
Mauser C96
Several revolutionaries use Mauser C96 pistols. A Mauser is also seen in hands of an Anarchist robber (uncredited).
Junkers (cadets) on defence of the Provisional Government fire an out of time Maxim M1910/30 machine gun of post-1940 version.
Other Weapons
RG-14/30 Hand Grenade
RG-14/30 hand grenades, standing for original RG-14, are briefly seen in several scenes.
Trivia
Holsters
Artillery
76.2mm M1902 (or, more likely, M1902/30 with L30 barrels) are seen in several scenes.
Armour
A replica of Austin armoured car is seen during the revolutionary events in Petrograd. It is based on Austin-Putilov version, identified by diagonally placed turrets.
Airplane
When a German airplane is seen in flight, is is a scale model looking similar to Etrich Taube.