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The White Darkness (Bílá tma): Difference between revisions
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== MP40 == | == MP40 == | ||
German soldiers and some partisans | German soldiers and some partisans are equipped with a [[MP40]] submachine guns. | ||
[[Image:MP40Side.jpg|thumb|none|350px|MP40 submachine gun - 9x19mm]] | [[Image:MP40Side.jpg|thumb|none|350px|MP40 submachine gun - 9x19mm]] | ||
[[Image:Germans-MP40-Bílá_tma.jpg|thumb|none|500px|German military patrol carries a submachine guns on their chest.]] | [[Image:Germans-MP40-Bílá_tma.jpg|thumb|none|500px|German military patrol carries a submachine guns on their chest.]] |
Revision as of 07:55, 27 December 2012
Bílá tma (English: The White darkness) is a Czech black-and-white war drama directed by František Cáp from 1948. This film was the first, which wants to artistically portrayal of the Slovak National Uprising by help of the Red Army. A young doctor Pavel Kafka (Július Pántik) and nurse Katka (Mária Prechovská) with a group of wounded to shelter in an underground hideout until the advent of liberation by the Soviet Army. Promoting friendship with the Red Army (and thus the USSR) and permeates the entire work in the film. The story raises in the viewer the feeling that the Russian partisan Dugin (Boris Andreyev), pictured as a handsome, kind-hearted Russian guy, which never has a moral crisis and is always at the right time at right place.
The following guns were used in the 1948 Czechoslovak film The White Darkness (Bílá tma):
PPSh-41
The partisans in the film are mostly armed with Soviet PPSh-41 submachine guns.
MP40
German soldiers and some partisans are equipped with a MP40 submachine guns.