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We'll Live Till Monday

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We'll Live Till Monday
Film poster
Directed byStanislav Rostotsky
Written byGeorgi Polonsky
Produced byGrigoriy Rimalis
StarringVyacheslav Tikhonov
Irina Pechernikova
Nina Menshikova
CinematographyVyacheslav Shumsky
Edited byValentina Mironova
Music byKirill Molchanov
Production
company
Release date
  • 28 November 1968 (1968-11-28)
Running time
106 minutes
CountrySoviet Union
LanguageRussian

We'll Live Till Monday (Russian: Доживём до понедельника, translit. Dozhivyom do ponedelnika) is a 1968 Soviet romantic drama film directed by Stanislav Rostotsky. It was entered into the 6th Moscow International Film Festival where it won the Golden Prize.[1] The film is about the life of an ordinary Moscow school with all its joys, problems and difficult choices in their lives of students and teachers.

History teacher Ilya Melnikov is familiar with both doubts and feelings of dissatisfaction. Though he is not always right, he fights, loves, and overcomes difficulties and doubts.

Plot

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The story spans three days in the life of a ninth-grade class in a typical Soviet high school located in a residential area of Moscow. Natasha Gorelova, a recent graduate, returns to her old school as an English teacher, now known as Natalia Sergeevna. She is joined by her former history teacher, Ilya Semyonovich Melnikov, a respected yet strict educator and former frontline officer. While he is well-regarded by students, his rigid principles lead to frequent conflicts with colleagues and even students’ families. Melnikov’s sternness and inner struggles—disillusionment with societal values, a sense of inadequacy, and unspoken feelings for Natalia—cause him deep personal turmoil. Meanwhile, the head teacher, Svetlana Mikhailovna, is a seasoned and somewhat dry educator who privately resents her unfulfilled life and harbors jealousy towards both Melnikov’s rapport with students and his connection with Natalia. In the classroom, the dynamics between students mirror their teachers’ conflicts: Gena Shestopal’s unrequited love for Rita Cherkasova leads to clashes with the class's charismatic yet cynical leader, Kostya Batishchev.

Over the three days, various interactions expose tensions and hidden feelings. On Thursday, a playful incident with a crow escalates, leading the students to boycott Natalia’s class, only to resolve it later with apologies on both sides. Friday sees Melnikov in a difficult confrontation with the school administration, expressing his frustrations about the growing indifference and lack of principles he perceives in society. His devotion to honesty and ideals leaves him isolated from those who find his standards too harsh. Meanwhile, Gena Shestopal, driven by his frustration over unspoken emotions, sneaks into the school after hours to steal and burn his classmates' essays, leaving a poetic note behind. On Saturday, as the incident comes to light, Gena faces possible expulsion, but Melnikov defends him, seeing the act as an expression of youthful rebellion rather than malice. The film culminates in Melnikov’s conflicted farewell at the end of the lesson, where he hints at leaving but then reassures the students it’s only “until Monday,” leaving them to ponder his true meaning.

Cast

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Awards

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References

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  1. ^ "6th Moscow International Film Festival (1969)". MIFF. Retrieved 19 December 2012.
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