In this fragment from episode 11 of the legendary Soviet film, «17 Moments of Spring», the truth is heard through the mouth of the brilliant Soviet actor Leonid Bronevoy, playing Gestapo chief, SS Gruppenfuhrer Heinrich Müller, in his monologue addressed to Stirlitz, played by Vyacheslav Tihonov.
Backup at Rumble.
👉 The complete series with English and Spanish subtitles can be watched at this YouTube palylist.
«17 Moments of Spring» is a novel by Julian Semyonov, the plot of which is based on the real events of the Second World War, when German representatives tried to negotiate a separate peace (BATS note: see our earlier publication The SVR has published new declassified documents on the Nazis’ ties with the West in 1945) with representatives of Western intelligence services (the so-called “Operation Sunrise”) in the spring of 1945. The novel was first published in the “Moscow” magazine in issues 11-12, 1969.
Prior books about the Soviet intelligence officer turned out to be so successful that even the chairman of the KGB, Yuri Andropov, liked them, and personally contacted Semyonov praising his work. The gratitude turned out to be not only verbal: Andropov gave the writer permission to visit the KGB archives, and also initiated the film adaptation of the novels.
The events described in the novel are based on the memoirs of Brigadefuhrer Walter Schellenberg. This man held the position of chief of intelligence of the Third Reich. According to the verdict of the Nuremberg trials, he received a rather short sentence, given his position. He later wrote a memoir, which was published in Europe after Schellenberg’s death. The book ended up in the Soviet Union and was kept in a closed KGB archive until Semyonov managed to read it. So the writer had a ready-made plot with real characters in his hands, which only needed to be finalised and add the sharpness of a political detective story.
Julian Semyonov did a tremendous job writing the book. In addition to working for hours with archives, he personally interviewed several SS leaders — among them, Paul Blum, an employee of the Bern residency of A. Dulles — and representatives of the Third Reich as a correspondent, and also participated in the search for Hitler’s henchmen.
In 1973, a 12-episode film adaptation of the novel directed by Tatiana Lioznova premiered.
As a screenwriter, Julian Semyonov initially planned only two episodes, rather than a full-fledged multi-part film. The word “moments” is figurative: the tense, tragic, fleeting days before the Victory really flashed by for the spy Isaev-Stirlitz like one breath. 17 is a reference to the 17 eventful days in the life of Stirlitz. This is exactly what the voiceover at the beginning of the film indicates: “We will tell you only about 17 days of this spring”.
There are a lot of shots of real documentary military chronicles in the series. In order to avoid too much contrast, the director decided to shoot everything in black and white film. Vyacheslav Tihonov fully supported this. According to the actor, the war, and especially in this film, is difficult to show in colour, because it is not a fairy tale. “The reality was like this. You can only imagine this from a black-and-white chronicle,” the lead actor noted.
👉 The following sources were used: 1, 2, 3, 4.
⚡️⚡️⚡️
This quote is something that reflects the current operation mode of all kinds of right-wing, brown, gray-brown-crimson Russian right, the monarchists, Russophobes and anti-Soviets — they act precisely according to the methodology of Ivan Ilyin from 1948, who pointed out the mistakes of fascism and expressed the hope that the Russian fascists would fix them:
“Franco and Salazar have understood this and are trying to avoid these mistakes. They don’t call their regime “fascist.” Let’s hope that the Russian patriots will think through the mistakes of fascism and National Socialism to the end and not repeat them.”
⚡️⚡️⚡️
👉 Credit for inspiration and part of the text to Pavel’s Bears Telegram channel.
👉 We have earlier translated a fragment of another semi-documentary film, “Confrontation” (https://t.me/BeornAndTheShieldmaiden/5815), also based on a work by Julian Semyonov.
👉 From our Telegram channel “Beorn And The Shieldmaiden”