Afghan Breakdown
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Afghan Breakdown | |
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Directed by | Vladimir Bortko |
Produced by | Aleksandr Golutva |
Written by | Leonid Bogachuk Aleksandr Chervinsky Mikhail Leshchinsky Ada Petrova |
Starring | Michele Placido |
Music by | Vladimir Dashkevich |
Cinematography | Valeri Fedosov Pavel Zasyadko |
Editing by | Mauro Bonanni |
Release date(s) | 1990 |
Running time | 140 mins. |
Country | Soviet Union Italy |
Language | Russian, Italian |
Allmovie profile | |
IMDb profile |
Afghan Breakdown (Афганский излом, Afganskiy Izlom in Russian) is a 1990 war film about the Soviet war in Afghanistan directed by Vladimir Bortko and co-produced by Italy and the Soviet Union (Lenfilm).
The film was the first in-depth war drama on the subject made in the Soviet Union after years of Soviet propaganda and censorship.[citation needed] It was also the first to talk about how pointless the 9-year occupation of Afghanistan was, the traumatic experiences of the thousands of soldiers and officers, and the atrocities committed by the army.
Vladimir Bortko visited Kabul and Kandahar in 1988 to do research on the ground. The movie is still regarded by most veterans as the best account of the war, despite new box-office hits coming out like 9th Company. Michele Placido, from the Italian mafia TV series The Octopus/La Piovra plays the main hero, Major Bandura, a commander of a unit of Soviet paratroopers.
The events unfold just before the start of the Soviet pullout from Afghanistan. A son of a high ranking military boss arrives in Afghanistan, hoping to take part in combat and earn some medals before the war ends. This leads to a chain of events and a dramatic finale. Major Bandura, who had a chance to leave for home, decides to stay with his men and take part in another operation in a remote village.