We'll Live Till Monday
1968 · Movie · 106 min. · Soviet Union (USSR)
Ilya Semenovich Melnikov is a history teacher in an ordinary Soviet high school. He is a very good teacher and his students and colleagues treat him with a great deal of respect. However, Melnikov faces a lot of difficulties in his work. In particular, everybody at school is spreading rumors about Natalya Sergeyevna, an Enlish language teacher and a former student of Melnikov, being in love with him. Exhausted by his mental suffering, Melnikov asks the principal to allow him to quit his job. At the end of the week that is to become the last week of Melnikov's teaching career the students of his class write an in-class essay on how they understand happiness. Svetlana Mikhailovna, their Russian teacher, is shocked by what one of the students wrote in her essay, nevertheless, she allows her to read it in front of the class. The other students express support of their classmate. Melnikov gets involved in the conflict, after which he reconsiders his decision to quit... Written by Denis Chebikin
Direction Stanislav Rostotsky
Cast Vyacheslav Tikhonov · Irina Pechernikova · Nina Menshikova · Mikhail Zimin · Nadir Malishevsky · Dalvin Shcherbakov · Olga Zhiznyeva
Soundtrack Kirill Molchanov
Screenplay Georgi Polonsky
Cinematography Vyacheslav Shumsky
Original title Dozhivyom do ponedelnika (We'll Live Till Monday)
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Not rated (FilmAffinity)
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