72 Meters

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72 Meters
Directed byVladimir Khotinenko
Produced byLeonid Vereshchagin
Konstantin Ernst
Anatoly Maximov
StarringSergei Makovetsky
Marat Basharov
Andrey Krasko
CinematographyIlya Dyomin [ru]
Music byEnnio Morricone
Release date
2004
Running time
115 minutes
CountryRussia
LanguageRussian

72 Meters (Russian: 72 метра, romanized72 metra) is a 2004 Russian disaster film directed by Vladimir Khotinenko based on the short stories from the collection of stories of the same name by Alexander Pokrovsky.

Synopsis

Officers of the Russian Navy, lieutenant-commanders Pyotr Orlov (Marat Basharov) and Ivan Muravyov (Dmitry Ulyanov) [1] have been members of the Slavyanka submarine crew for a long time. They used to be best friends, but during their service in Sevastopol in the 1980s, they met a beautiful girl Nelly (Chulpan Khamatova) and fell in love with her at first sight. Nelly chose Ivan, and their friendship fractured.

In the early 1990s, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union and partition of the Soviet Navy, the crew of Slavyanka refused to swear allegiance to Ukraine and were transferred to the Northern Fleet. After that, life and service took their quiet routine course. During an ordinary sortie Captain Gennady Yanychar (

Sergey Makovetsky
).

No-one in the training center knows where the submarine would move. Unknown to the crew, an old World War II naval mine was disturbed. It slowly moved towards the submarine and explodes, sinking it. Only one compartment remains unflooded. Several crew members die in the result of the explosion, including the submarine's commander, Captain Yanychar. The submariners decide to get out though the torpedo tube, but it turns out that only one breathing apparatus is charged and can be used; the rest are empty. The crew decides that Chernenko has to be the one saved first. They instruct him how to act during resurfacing. Chernenko successfully reaches the surface and gets to ground. It remains unknown whether the crew was saved.

Cast

References

  1. ^ "РИА "Новый регион — Киев"". Archived from the original on 2013-06-09. Retrieved 2013-01-26.

External links