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Devotion (1954 film)

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Devotion
Template:Lang-ru
Directed byIvan Pyryev
Written by
Starring
CinematographyValentin Pavlov
Music byIsaak Dunayevsky
CountrySoviet Union

Devotion (Template:Lang-ru) is a 1954 Soviet film directed by Ivan Pyryev.[1][2]

Plot

An elderly worker, Yegor Lutonin at one moment begins to realize that his daughters are unhappy and decides to help them.

Andrei Kalmykov, the husband of Olga, the eldest daughter of Yegor Lutonin loves another woman and after work drives to her. Andrei suffers greatly from this duality, but he cannot help himself. At last, the mistress puts to Andrey a rigid condition: to divorce the wife or to forget about her. Plucking up courage, Andrei goes home and confessed to Olga, who for a long time already all guessed. But Andrei is an exemplary employee, a member of the Comminst Party and, in addition, he posts one of the senior positions at the plant, has a personal chauffeur. For these reasons he is not allowed to divorce. In the end the Kalmykov loses both of his beloved women.

Lutonin's younger daughter, Varya, falls in love with a new engineer at the car factory, and already decides to marry him, but Yegor Lutonin is in no hurry to give his parental consent: something does not satisfy him in this young man. Soon it becomes clear that the apprehensions are not groundless: he appropriated the invention of Petya, who loves Varya, and after a little time, it is also revealed that he pays part of the salary on the writ of execution of his mother. Varya is shocked and depressed that he is not the person she imagined him to be.

Andrew goes to Chukotka to lay the railway. Once in the North, he is increasingly aware of his mistake and guilt towards Olga.

Former driver of Andrey comes home to Lutonins and tells Olga that the plane on which Andrei flew, had an accident, and he is in hospital. She decides immediately to go to him, and at the end of the film she comes to him in the hospital and their fates are reunited once again.

The film ends with a kind of "confession" of Egor Kuzmich Lutonin to his old friend Savva vikentevich Ryabchikov.

Starring

References