Walking the Streets of Moscow


Walking the Streets of Moscow is a 1964 Soviet film directed by Georgiy Daneliya and produced by Mosfilm studios. It stars Nikita Mihalkov, Aleksei Loktev, Jevgeny Steblov and Galina Polskikh. The film also features cameos by four People's Artists of the USSR: Rolan Bykov, Vladimir Basov, Lev Durov, and Inna Churikova. The famous movie theme, performed by Mikhalkov, was written by the composer Andrej Petrov. The film, regarded as one of the most characteristic of the Khrushchev Thaw, premiered at the 1964 Cannes Film Festival and won a prize for the work of cameraman Vadim Yusov, best known for his subsequent collaboration with Andrei Tarkovsky.

Plot summary

The film opens at a Moscow airport in summer 1963. A young man, Volodya, calls out to a young woman he sees singing to herself and dancing.
Volodya is an aspiring writer from Siberia. His first short story has just been published in the magazine Yunost, and a famous author, Voronin, has invited him to Moscow to discuss his work. In the Moscow Metro Volodya unexpectedly makes a friend, Kolya, who is returning home after a hard night shift. Volodya wants to stay at his old friends' home, but he doesn't know where the necessary street is so Kolya decided to help him to find it.
Unfortunately, a dog bites Volodya near Clean Ponds. Then Kolya decided to help his new friend again – they both came to Kolya's home where Kolya sews Volodya's trousers and introduces him to Kolya's large family. Volodya recognised that his old Moscow friends aren't in Moscow and Volodya stays at Kolya's. Then Volodya goes for a walk.
At last alone, Kolya decided to sleep, but then came his old friend Sasha. Sasha is in trouble – he was planning on marrying his fiancée Sveta today, but he has been called up for military service. He begs Kolya to help him. Kolya helps. Then two young men go to the Main Department Store to buy a suit for a bridegroom and they meet Volodya there. Then friends decided to buy a present for a bride and they go to the music shop, because the saleswoman, Alyona is a love interest for Kolya...

Cast

This film was highly beloved by Soviet youth in the early 1960s. Though its plot is a bit naive and unpretentious, it showed how wonderful life was, gives hope and tries to look at the unpleasant things in an optimistic way. The song by the same name from the film is still popular and became the unofficial hymn of Moscow youth.
The popularity of this film was low in the 1970s but rose again in the 1980s in contrast to contemporaneous "chernukha" films, gloomy satirical and social dramas with philosophical motifs. Nowadays it is still very famous.
There are new versions of the song by some 1990s Russian rock groups and also a film remake, The Heat, which was commercially successfully but critically panned.