tv PODKAST 1TV May 11, 2023 1:30am-2:11am MSK
1:30 am
piotr number one attraction combo is a may 17th yummy hotspot challenge for may's tinkoff cashback fest, bitch, hitting 70 percent of popular categories when shopping at your favorite stores. get any card tinkoff participates in every place from may 15 to may 28 and get up to 70% cashback. he is such a visiting director of the circus on tsvetnoy boulevard. maxi nikulin and we continue the conversation fits in my head. so to speak, in our community, intrigue is everything. yes, everyone gossips about each other even in soviet times before the yellow press appeared. there were all sorts of rumors pencils that he was such and such an evil one , we won’t talk about oleg, and always in
1:31 am
a superlative degree with enthusiasm about your dad here with all this popularity. uh, he was filming all the time, with such exalted beautiful actresses and with his mother he lived for 56 years. yes, and also no rumors, no novels on the side. here is how such fidelity married and how it did not stick. you understand that it touched that your mom and dad never confessed. these are the kisses you know on people and so on. well, for example, dad, uh, passing by could pat mom on the head or when you even read all this, because, well, that's what it is to tears. in my feelings, i never told him how he had spoken little to me lately, at least on the topic not related to the circus, but what to talk about after so many years together, i only loved passing yura sitting at some regular solitaire kiss him on the bald head, and at the
1:32 am
same time he did not even raise his head. he just smiled and that was enough for us to without words to say, we are happiness, together still, passionately, love each other, you are a happy person. here you are a happy person, there should still be enough right for 15 generations of your happiness, and this love for your children and grandchildren. therefore, i consider myself a happy person. of course, i know that dad never raised his voice at you , the only thing he cursed was. what is the most if he wanted to at all can punish me with a word, right? then he says what are you doing to me? what an obedient boy? no, i understand that because he talked about his childhood about school. there, his obedient years were strong, the title could not be studied very well, and his mother
1:33 am
stood up for him. yurochka. bad memory so otmazyvali speaking our language, but he, too, me, too, no one really forced. yes, i was scolded for you, test church, that it is difficult to sit down and learn this memory is difficult and lazy in fact. i liked it yes , in general, in a good way, of course, my grandmother was my mother's mother, maria petrovna , of course, she took a sip from me. it's so embarrassing now. i was far from being the most obedient son grandson, and their parents were not. they were on tour, they came for a maximum of two months in moscow and then they couldn’t be with me in any way to educate me to love and so on. i also toured all the time. and my diesel. now he presents me, of course , that's what i always say, and where would you live, what would you eat? this is my job, but you have. but
1:34 am
the daughters also say the son. well, such work , too, you are not on the internet with your grandmother to stop, leaving their grandmother would have an advantage, because if it weren’t grandmothers and rooms in moscow, uh, they would drag me along with them to these last apartments, according to the standards there. i grew up completely different. i went on tour with him for almost all 50 years of our marriage except for. is that the first years of life of the son of maxim a few years. i was sitting at home with a child, i remember how yura and i flew in after a six-month tour in the usa and canada and a three-year-old maksyushka. greeted us. hello uncle. yura was terribly upset. yes, my own son went and forgot me, tell me. yes well, this is a strange thing. to me now i remember i never had such a thing, you know, resentment, that’s an abandoned child, probably, their great love was so great, and i described all this in letters. they
1:35 am
made phone calls. later they even became. call abroad. and only today they understand what it was worth. they were around all the time. uh, around me in me, so alone everyone loves when bags of letters to your dad, and of all they want to communicate with him and everyone wants his attention. and you are small. and you are a teenager, and dad has such popularity, well , which does not fit, in general, in the universe you there was no such boyish jealousy, no, there was no jealousy. later, for a short time, there was at least an unconscious feeling of resentment and precisely for the fact that the same ones endlessly did something for someone. that's something someone always helped achieve, yes, he had enough for himself, and he and his mother were enough, if there was already, this great trinity was already impossible popularity. and you continued to live in
1:36 am
a communal apartment in two rooms. you didn't have an apartment knocked out for everyone, and you didn't have a separate apartment. this is also accidental, because i came for someone to ask for colonel and conversation. there it turned out that yes the chairman of this. the executive committee of this, the father said, looked around and said in a whisper, that is, an idiot. father there was really good. i missed it. uh, a few years moved some about absolutely no wonderful communal apartments. almost all of our relatives were there. we lived as one big family. we had a sign for everything. mom’s relatives are already all data from a front-line friend who lives with us on his sister and their parents, their children, then later grandchildren, well, we are there together, as if brother and sister
1:37 am
, they are my brother and sister, although not second cousins, but we lived in the same room on average helped. yes, of course, well, i had some kind of michael, what is this insult, but you don’t know that she says something, and then i realized, it’s not that she doesn’t love me, but from the fact that i am always there, and this can be done at any moment, and this fifteenth thirty-second needs help today that it will be too late, this is medicine, this is hospital surgery, doctors and registered and apartments. at some point, we called him, you know, soviet power. here you will be completely there as a young boy , you understand that not all people are conscientious, that dad deceives many. well, in particular , they wrote letters to him with help and helped everyone. and you said they are cheating on you. well, it's very clear, dad answered, what if not. well, what if the truth is trouble there, well, suddenly they can already work after all, when i usually didn’t tell me these next applicants, it means
1:38 am
if here, and everyone has all the same children there forward there in the palm of your hand, yourself we stole money from tashkent, we lost our passport, but this is one scheme, we, here they are, to increase these there, the happy ones were left together. i tell her, look, well, it's not about the money. to hell with them with money, it's understandable there, but now they are going and thinking to themselves, how cool we were. not a kulin. what a no goof. here you are not offended, but he was understandable to sit. that's it. the enemy sat and sat and they say boy. what if it's true, my gold and i immediately have all my arguments. holy angel and it's true that in the nineties, when in general there was nothing for people to eat, and in the circus, these poor animals had nothing to feed. they starved that your dad came to the chairman
1:39 am
to tell the ministers and said that if you do not allocate money for ah, food for animals, then i will bring them all here. you are his performance. maybe you see at some extraordinary session, when it was decided to sell meat at commercial prices, including the church, we’ll fire him, the next one didn’t work, and my father went there and he was so a professional master shot his performance that no one was ready for. nikulin came, everyone loves him. everyone respects him. he came to the podium and told about jokes, as usual, he started with this. you have a bad memory yurka jokes. do you remember? well, somehow, very smoothly and gently , imperceptibly, with humor, he switched to a direct threat. when he said, gorbachev was sitting there. uh, in the presidium, gavriil popov was the second mayor, and then he said that if you don’t lower
1:40 am
the prices for us, the food for the animal was collected by this cage and bring constantly against us advice. and if it doesn't work then, then we 'll open the cells. and the people somehow immediately took the rooster, because they realized that, of course, he was joking, but not quite. and the fact that my father knocked out money for new circuses, when everything was just in general, and that is, not up to the church, not up to anything. it's just that many people remained of this group created, which went around the offices and as long as they were there in a circle, each time they were lowered by some people's artists of russia in the end, who had no other choice, and he went for the last time. this is nikolaevich rozhkov, for example, a minister and so on, who could pardon the guardians, and we were all waiting for the results of the temporary directorate on petrovsky boulevard church then. and then he came, nikulin settled down, just took off his hat and put it down and sits and we all sit. that's how
1:41 am
it withstood the good air, even the larger one of the democrats, then i raised my eyes so we'll start, signed everything to be silent, and then they generally ran to the grocery stores with jubilation. this last minute worked at the circus. yes of course, listen to work when they say work artists, they say, played theatrical say we played a performance say mats work we have a small but enough creatures. it's more of a responsibility, of course. there is a risk. there is a risk and you hold in your hands the life of a partner in the lounge in your shoulders in your hands in the castle, anywhere you are responsible for him, so there are forties grows a little different. they mature earlier, because they acquire this sense of responsibility of the dynasty, such as those of the circus. yes, well, in general, yes. there is no such relationship that was forced first, with dad, do one number, and then so 50 years and uh side by side reach in
1:42 am
principle, even to uh absurdity, sometimes the cases were really completely group. uh, a high rope aerial rope, and there, as usual, it's family-based on a family basis. there is a family, it is growing. children of the daughter-in-law, there is generally a number. well, yes, a and at some point, uh, dad and son, and the passport founder, as if the numbers, and the children continue to work all together. dad and son quarreled, why did they quarrel so much? i don't know the reason and no one understood they did not speak for the rest of their father's life. they corresponded through their mother. oh what, well, every evening they went out to beckon each other to insure. because these are different things, this is a circus, this works. you became the director of the circus after the departure of the pope, yes, yes, but what about you , in fact, clowns and not very kind people, well, by and large. e your father - this
1:43 am
is an exception of some kind of angel who flew in to show how humanly it can be, how you have not been eaten all these years. i think the conservation instinct kicked in because uh i was offered in quality. i have been working as a distributor director for 3 years. and it was easier for me, because i came into my own world. i grew up there, er, but i came from another world, and i never lived in this world, actually insurance, and i had no enemies, nicknames, or people who owe me to people i owe, that is, i came without tail, as if they felt the leaf, while no one was ever incited. yes, you would not work in the circus. no, circus, therefore, yes, not as artists, an employee, and it helped me a lot and my friends supported me colleagues in the management, who proposed me as a general director, understanding
1:44 am
perfectly. uh, as it were, a commercial component of this story, because well, it’s really nikulin’s line with you and with whose father he had just done something much easier for the church than you and i, but he asked your dad, although it’s not scary son something to bring and dad, as brilliantly answered. and that i had to put my son hard? well, i was also just jarred that i was ready for this. maybe i just didn't think about it. a then i realized, yes, probably, he made decisions. well, just such a breed. here no one sticks to you, neither to your father nor to you. don't hope to your children. yes , we have some humanoids. well, not so long ago, shortly before the start of this covid, but a person left the life of the audience, and his substitutes for another ten years, our organs, every year on the thirty-first of december , someone came to church with his wife supported
1:45 am
the administration today and it turned out that he most of all married young, on december 31, forty- two, and invited his young wife to circus, and in the morning he had to go to the front near moscow and he told her that you know if i return or promise that every year on december 31 we will go to church with you. that's every year they came, that's when we found out about it. we met with him and made him free tickets. yes, it was natural, and he came for the last time. he came already with great-grandchildren, they gave it to him easily. and there was a man who was 15-12-15. well, not so long ago he did not. and that's all, as it were, over. thank you i would be with you i sat until the morning, and i just look at you in happiness, you have this blood. it's just that this person
1:46 am
is your angel to me, dad, so thank you so much. i congratulate you on victory day , it is such happiness that you are talking with such a pure soul about the need to preserve this memory, you need not to bear it , you must tell your children and grandchildren about it so that they never forget. thank you very much. hello, my name is alexei varlamov, i am a writer and rector of the gorky literary institute, this is a podcast life of the wonderful and today we will talk about an excellent writer about a bunny, an assistant professor of the department of literary skill of a literary institute. andrei valerievich gelasimov andrey valerievich is a famous
1:47 am
writer and author of many romanov stories by e. tale thirst a steppe gods, a year of deceit a and the topics of our today's conversation with andrei valerievich. this is literature about the great patriotic war echo of the great war, the generation of people who fought has practically passed away and all the books that could not be written have already been written, and the topics of the great war have not left our lives. how do you think, andrey valeryevich why na will be for a very long time, firstly, uh, because not much time has passed, and secondly, literature needs hmm really large time layers to realize such large-scale events. well, let's just remember that leo nikolayevich tolstoy wrote about the great war of 1812 more than half a century later, and he did not relate and did not participate in any
1:48 am
way because of his age, but nevertheless it was very important for him, uh, to try to analyze. what happened to the people , first of all, and to their country, and at the moment the great threat and these dramatic times, of course, will always interest writers , it is always another matter that the view of a contemporary and accomplice of events. it is very different from an attempt at analysis after, say, half a century or even 70 years. and why do you think it happened? the question is often asked why war and peace has not been written about the great patriotic war, and why so many books written by participants in this war have not appeared about the war of 12 years. how much has been written about the war of the great patriotic war? why is it exactly the opposite situation? ah, more is written, but simply due to the fact that culture has changed , the cultural code has changed and there are more people who simply write literature in the 19th century. you know this very well, after all, it was the lot of
1:49 am
aristocratic circles in the 20th century. everything happened. uh, in a completely different mode , firstly, and the education system has changed more appeared among literate people, but lighter in culture and writing, so i think the participants in the great patriotic war wrote more than the participants in the patriotic war. twelfth year, and what are your favorite books vasil bykov was very important to me and still is boris vasiliev a and the dawns here are quiet and not even thanks to the wonderful. and in fact, the most powerful request of this wonderful story. at one time i read an article by such a karelian writer from petrozavodsk, in my opinion, his name was dmitry gusarov, also a writer and participant in the great patriotic war. and it was such a very harsh critical article against the story of boris vasiliev, the meaning, which was that he invented everything, there wasn’t, there wasn’t there were no such girls anti-aircraft gunners there in
1:50 am
karelia, it is impossible. the situation that i wrote and i must say that i willingly believe that it may not have happened. well, this does not beg the dignity of this story at all. it is still beautiful, and here a very interesting topic arises, that there is such a truth about the war. eh, that's literally documentary and there is still the artist's right to fiction. actually. leo nikolayevich tolstoy, too, but reproached. they said that this was not so and napoleon was not like that kutuzov was not like that and the battle of borodino was not like that, but we perceive it this way through literature, and boris vasilyev still doesn’t even compare war and peace and azuri is quiet here, but nevertheless it has become like that. this is the key book in our minds in our understanding of war, and i think it's a very, uh, important topic. in her. after all, there is alexei nikolaevich in this story , the most important thing that is not a scientist is obviously this critic you are talking about, and in it there is a story about the act of people and actions that, in fact, are a feat when
1:51 am
they u sacrifice their lives, u are carried on. as it was reported local battles. yes, and vasily plays. it seems to me a very important counterpoint that is afraid of local significance, but life is one and these girls and the foreman of the vasques are doing incredible things. well, yes, girls. could not resist, girls anti-aircraft gunners, could not resist. uh, carefully trained saboteurs from the troops. ccc probably not, yes to the paratroopers, but this one, yes, it looks implausible, but this counterpoint, that in incredible circumstances, e such things, and he works in this in this story, and when vaskov, at the end of catching these surviving nazis, says to them. there he calls the number i don't remember exactly. let's say there are seven girls. i had seven. but you didn’t pass, this is a replica, you will manually agree. that's for this. actually.
1:52 am
i am sure that the whole thing was written for the sake of this remark, and it is extremely important, because , well, it is important, yes, the message is about a feat, and the feats of a personal e are a small person who does not mean there from the point of view of a big war. just private and here, in this case, there are also women, which i think gives. enormous meanings, that is, a woman at war - this is another story altogether. by the way, it’s very interesting that, uh, did you notice in the soviet military request of the 20th century there is almost no pacifism, despite the fact that it’s more of a western european literary tradition when they write about the war, the topic of pacifism is very important. we really have a theme of heroism, and not because the communist party ordered so. and not because there is something censored missed, some pacifist notes, pacifist themes were there by his okudzhava of the same his leave his wonderful books and wonderful authors, but still , the feat became the main such pressing motive
1:53 am
for both vasily bykov bondarev and konstantin vorobyov, whom i love very much and which was not very recognized by the regional soviet authorities, but still this is the theme of a feat. she really ended up in that central literature, you know, it is connected with awareness, ongoing events with awareness on a personal level and authors and these heroes. because if we, for example, take a look at remarque's book all quiet on the western front, then yes. we see one very important detail. there, one of the characters speaks to the other. and i'm a meaningless soldier. i generally says, nobody i just have to boot and rifle. and if you remember during the first world war. uh, this is the western front. it was a confrontation between germany and france for 3 years. they really were in the same place. frank did not move in either direction, practically away from here. arose. it is natural to think that all this is absurd, that this is just a meat grinder that
1:54 am
turns people over in one place. it is not clear for any purpose. that's what was important for remarque, in our own war in the great patriotic war there was another topic, it completely arises, firstly, the topic of overcoming the enemy who came to your land and behaved not human there from humanistic points of view. yes positions, first, in the first world war. the same remarque did not wage war with civilians. him there are scenes where the german soldiers run away. just having fun with french girls there. yes, they have fun with a scarf, then it returns, and we can’t compare it. we can’t have such a thing, so that means the german soldiers had fun there, went with the girls with russian merrymakers, that is, well, there will be many questions. yes, uh, russian girls, somehow i don’t think that german soldiers were very welcomed by a separate case, maybe there are, but like this, to say, it’s like a typical no, but it was clear understanding of the enemies, and therefore, after this
1:55 am
once the enemies, then, therefore, overcoming the enemy. enemy. you have to get rid of it, it's scary. and i think this awareness distinguished, uh, russian soldiers from the soldiers of the war, therefore, notes of pacifism. uh, we simply couldn’t have existing remarque. okay, but this is still literature of the 20th century. and let's focus on what is happening in the twenty-first century right here from my point of view. uh, well, i would name several large interesting bright works and still i would start with a book by a writer who was in the war, and who managed to write this book. this is such a legendary russian soviet writer patriarch, as they would say soviet literature, and daniil granin danil granin whom we know very well from his novels devoted to the scientific and technological revolution, social topics, historical topics. there are conversations from the evening with peter the great bison.
1:56 am
yes, i’m going into a thunderstorm in timothy, of course, but somehow i didn’t even keep in my head that i actually fought the brink and suddenly, at the very end of his life, this man writes a novel, not even a small novel, but a war story that called maul or lieutenant. i will honestly tell you andrei valerievich when i read it. stupidity i caught myself thinking. why haven't you written about this before? danila alexandrovich yes, this is much more interesting than evenings. with peter the great, this book struck me with its freshness. he wrote that he was over 90 years old. yes , with my own personal view of this personal relationship to the war, then this is a very important topic, uh, which also has a lot written about the blockade of leningrad uh, the battle of leningrad. that's how it started? how was the blockade established? sincere in the first person written, in my opinion, absolutely wonderful young full of energy of storytelling. here, i really think. what it is? well, the truth is a very striking phenomenon in russian literature, by the way, it was not by chance that granin received the big book prize.
1:57 am
if we talk about the freshness, by the way, of this text, but hmm very curious hmm here is the initiation of the text, how it starts in general in the conversation about the war, when we watch the great patriotic war in films or read, and the book is one of the most important moments is a description like a hero receives information about the beginning of the war, that is, here is the initiation and events. and here i was surprised by the scene, how the hero really receives, uh, this knowledge, and it is told in an erotic context. if you remember. yes , of course, he meets a beautiful young girl. uh, sunday means a wonderful sunny day. they are moving off into the woods somewhere, which means, he says, that my intentions were far from restrained. that's why they go further into the forest, and he and i understood why we were going there, and she understood that i understand, which means that's all. it happens
1:58 am
in such a game structure in nature and suddenly, it means that there are some voices steps , something someone walks these jump up frightened lieutenant, and he doesn’t really pay attention to them, which means he just, says it’s impossible here get out of here quickly, only some soldiers are running with them. they are already pulling some lines of communication, and now. this very strong junction gives rise to such a contrast, yes, a transition, when the hero has not yet understood. we said we were going back in the train, and we were laughing, and around they were already talking about the war, and i still didn’t understand anything. this beautiful transition has been made. for me, in a very new way, i well read a lot of book war here on the edge. he really surprised me with the freshness of his eyes, how strange and absurd great things happen to us that can no longer be changed. that's what he managed to create here, how to write or this, of course for the patriarch of literature for a ninety-year-old author, of course, this is a great achievement. it's very, very cool. very humanly, very much so, she is personally written despite the fact that, as it were, she is on
1:59 am
an epic scale. unfortunately she is not very big. so i'm saying why i'm sorry that he took her late. it's really there. well, maybe not war and peace, but some book in which here is the penetration of war and peace , these two different states, but the then soviet one. society he could but show, but due to the fact that he made it necessary to say to him, thank you very much. and to our viewers, yes , this book, if anyone has not read it, is sure to recommend reading it. how does he name remember about the dizzy helps to restore memory and reduce dizziness at the object. now don't forget to have time for the may tinkov cashbackfest court contact up to 70% in popular categories when buying in your favorite stores. issue any card tinkoff participates in cashbest from may 15 to may 28
2:00 am
2:01 am
try activate megaforce with 5g and be the fastest megaphone install the sportmaster mobile application choose a travel backpack and buy at a discount 15% for the first online gas. sportmaster - the most sports application. pentalgin is a remedy for various types of pain pentalgin acts against pain, wherever it is, regardless of the causes of its occurrence. pentalgin will do without pain cash money on the card immediately deferral of the first payment up to 90 days to issue a cash loan and receive money. right now. he is such a one russian lotto presents a new funny. win millions of any number.
2:02 am
overcome the force of attraction combo, this is a challenge on may 17 at a delicious point in time for may tinkov cashback fest, bitch, contacts 70 percent in popular categories when shopping at your favorite stores. issue any tinkoff card participates in cashback together from may 15 to may 28 and get cashback up to 70%. tinkov he is so alone we continue the conversation with andrey gilas with you alexey varlamov writer rector of the literary institute podcast. still wonderful life. by the way, if we talk that's it about leningrad, i would name a writer and a book that can be directly related to the dismissal kochergin is wonderful
2:03 am
artist at the bolshoi drama theater, by the way, the book is called baptized with crosses. this is his personal. uh, the story is an autobiographical book about his childhood, about how his children were taken out of besieged leningrad and his childhood in orphanages. this military couple is described. and that's what surprised me about this book. and by the way, in the performance , which was staged in the bdt, this is how he describes the summer of the forty-fifth year, when they return. here are our soldiers, our officers , our soldiers return home, and how they are met. this is a huge trans-siberian road. he was somewhere in siberia at that time, he, on the contrary, makes his way from the orphanage in the opposite direction, returns to his place in leningrad, and now he sees these people, how women come to these huge stations, junction stations, women come, wives come, and someone’s whole husband comes , and someone comes to the husbands of a crippled disabled person. this is the bitter side of the war and this boy himself
2:04 am
, who travels with these soldiers, but who draws a profile for them there , not a wire, he makes a profile of stalin you are here the atmosphere of time, it really conveyed in this book wonderful and great. and it seems to me that this is also such an important facet of military prose to convey even non-military. that's exactly what a child saw through the eyes , apparently through the eyes of a teenager, that he remembered the faces, the voices, the characters, these living people who made our victory, no, not monuments, not monuments. about andrei platonov , by the way, another very important name in russian military prose, because platonov's stories are about the war. this is also such a very important page. in platonov's notebooks. there is an amazing recording for the dance tramples the memory of the war. it seems to me that literature intuitively feels that this is something that cannot be allowed to be done, but these are books. e participants in the war. and here is the question, why write or
2:05 am
modern writers of our own generation and even younger ones, why are they not having a military? experiences turn e to the military theme. well, here, probably, one can name several such key works that have appeared, but in recent years, but i would name maybe three books that have been produced on i'm very impressed. this is a novel by sergey samsonov's falcon frontier, this is a story. uh, ilya boeshova, a tanker or the white tiger and the story of eduard verkin, and the cloud regiment, as far as i understand, when a sergey samsonov from his story got, uh, his debut in the award and you were the chairman of the jury, then, well, tell me about your impressions of your solution and of this book. when i started reading, falcon frontier. that's when just now he headed the jury, uh, debut am. i was somewhat wary, because the military theme
2:06 am
for me personally is not for me personally. as an author a writer just as a person. yes, she is very important to me. uh, and i'm so wary, so, uh, i opened the novel, but when, let's say, you don't immediately roll into it, because i must say, it 's not written quite simply, it's written some kind of complex, andrey bely's petersburg, it's such a complex syntactic constructions , it is necessary to wade through them, but there is something for which it is not easy, but everything fell into place when i realized that seryozha was writing a modern liad. that is when i realized that we have this confrontation. rather, in his novel there is a confrontation between two aces. uh, this german pilot and the soviet stalinist sokol zarygin. and this is a confrontation. i thought it was like a confrontation between hector and achilles at gamar. and then further everything
2:07 am
got up, such a mythologization occurs, of course, yes, that is, a change in the realism of this soviet war of the rose is a myth. exactly, and even at a technical level it is noticeable with him, because if you start reading this book aloud, you will see that at times it goes into the hexamentor. he rhythmizes this prose, that is, if not just with your eyes, yes, quickly slip, and look so carefully, then you see how the adjective lines up and everything adds up to a certain, and to certain rhythmic e, pattern. so this is really practically eecta, and it was a huge risk on the part of the author, of course, but it seems to me, a huge amount of work. i think so, but he won. of course, look, despite the conventionality of the mythological space and the method that sergei samsonov uses. i am in some places. here in this in this powerful such as on iron sheets beat from each other. and sometimes i could not hold back
2:08 am
my tears, despite the unrealistic narration, that is, becoming samsonov. the tones are absolutely, like the ancient greek choir in the ancient greek tragedy, managed to penetrate into the tragic plane, creating, but a truly great large-scale work, and it is very different from the prose of the lieutenants of the 20th century. very very emphasized by the conventionality of the ongoing events of metaphor. although there is uh, and almost details and a lot of hobbies, it is clear that he studied the material about it. by the way, we need to talk more today, because this is one of the important differences between modern prose. the fact is that, uh , participants in the war, uh, and coopers and i'm afraid of vasiliev and so on. they don't dwell so much on technical details, contemporaries. both seryozha and i would like a seam and other authors. uh, often addicted to wikipedia. i understand access to information
2:09 am
has become huge and when you start doing research. you. well, you 're into one fact or another, right? and it's taking its toll and ending up with a big one there uh there are phrases that the machine gun fired at a speed of 1,200 rounds per minute, and i think so, i think so. and why should i know? here but this is precisely, as it were, the author's delight from the information that he has now received. well, by the way, since you're talking about a big fucking wonder that two writers. in general, i think independently come. here's to this idea to portray the war as a confrontation. well, two people. yes, you say vectors, yes, uh and uh, and uh, so samson, this is aviation pilots, aces, both are cheap. these are tankers it means our tanker, who appears here is the beginning of the novel, the story of roman is bewitching, when this man, who is absolutely burned there tankers who doctors don’t even want to treat, because 98
2:10 am
there or 90%, and the skin that suffered from a burn and suddenly he’s like that miraculously. yes, this is some kind of magical moment that is present here. this man is resurrected, it turns out that this is a brilliant mechanic, and it means he returns to duty and his task is to knock out the same brilliant white tiger it means that the fascist tank and this duel of two soviet and german tankers actually constitutes the idea of this story of this book, according to which, by the way, karen shakhnazarov made a film white tiger. yes , but it’s really ours who writes, and sovremennik is his attitude to the war. there is one more book about which i would like to say this, i already mentioned it, but the cloud regiment by eduard verkin. and this is a very interesting book, because it is dedicated to the pioneers of the heroes. more precisely , to one pioneer of the hero lena golikov, who are people well, our generation is fine with you remember that all soviet childhood. we read about the pioneers of heroes. they really were ours.
28 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on