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Twenty-seven years after the war, former radio operator Dina Aleksandrovna reunites with her comrades in an attempt to establish the true cause of the death of the commander and commissar of her partisan unit....
Twenty-seven years after the war, former radio operator Dina Aleksandrovna reunites with her comrades in an attempt to establish the true cause of the death of the commander and commissar of her partisan unit....
The political bias of the movie cannot be evaluated as no plot details, thematic elements, or contextual information were provided beyond its title and director.
This Soviet-era animated film features traditional casting, consistent with its cultural and historical context, without explicit diversity initiatives. The narrative does not present critiques of traditional identities or incorporate explicit DEI themes, focusing instead on a family-oriented story.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
This 1985 Soviet TV movie is an adaptation of the play "The Old Maid" by Nadezhda Ptushkina. There is no evidence to suggest that any established character from the source material had their gender changed in the film adaptation.
This 1985 Soviet TV movie is an adaptation of a 1928 play. The characters, implicitly of European descent in the original context, are portrayed by actors of European descent. There is no evidence of any character being canonically, historically, or widely established as one race and then portrayed as a different race.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources