The Seventh Companion (Sedmoy sputnik): Difference between revisions
The Seventh Companion (Sedmoy sputnik): Difference between revisions - Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
The Seventh Companion (Sedmoy sputnik): Difference between revisions
[[File:Sedmoy sputnik-Chronicle-2.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Japanese soldiers with rifles. The rifle at the right is definitly an [[Arisaka Type 30]] or [[Arisaka Type 38|Type 38]] while other rifles hardly can be identified.]]
[[File:Sedmoy sputnik-Chronicle-2.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Japanese soldiers with rifles. The rifle at the right is definitly an [[Arisaka Type 30]] or [[Arisaka Type 38|Type 38]] while other rifles hardly can be identified.]]
[[File:Sedmoy sputnik-Chronicle-3.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Soldiers of the White Army (they are described as such but in reality this may be a photo of Russian Imperial troops) with Mosin Nagant rifles.]]
[[File:Sedmoy sputnik-Chronicle-3.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Soldiers of the White Army (they are described as such but in reality this may be a photo of Russian Imperial troops) with Mosin Nagant rifles.]]
The Seventh Companion (Sedmoy sputnik) is a 1968 (filmed 1967) Soviet B&W drama directed by Grigoriy Aronov and Aleksey German and based on the story by Boris Lavrenev (this is the third screen adaptation of the original story after 1928 and 1962 versions). The plot depicts the tragical story of Evgeniy Pavlovich Adamov (Andrei Popov), former General and Professor of the military law academy of the Russian Army, during the Russian Civil War.
Note: the English release title The Seventh Companion doesn't match the meaning of the Russian title. The Seventh Satellite would be more correct as Adamov calls himself a satellite of the revolution.
The following weapons were used in the film The Seventh Companion (Sedmoy sputnik):