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  1. Fyodor Korchagin. Actor: Idu na grozu. Fyodor Korchagin was born on 12 April 1905 in Odessa, Kherson Governorate, Russian Empire. He was an actor, known for Idu na grozu (1965), Chelovek, kotoryy somnevaetsya (1963) and White Bim Black Ear (1977).

    • April 12, 1905
    • July 26, 1975
  2. When Pavka Korchagin (Viktor Perest-Petrenko) steals a pistol from the room of German commandant, Walther PP switches to equally out of time TT-33. Later a TT is used by Fyodor Zhukhrai (Daniil Sagal). Some German officers carry TT holsters but the pistols aren't seen.

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  3. Ostrovsky was a teenage soldier in the Red Army during the Civil War, before continuing his work in the Communist Youth League (Komsomol) and frequently appeared in Soviet magazines and on radio.Through its hero, Pavel Korchagin who begins the story as a boy slaving in the kitchens of a railway station restaurant in wartorn Tsarist Ukraine, the book follows not just Korchagin's developing life but also the development of socialism from the ashes of the First World War, through the triumph of ...

  4. Going Inside a Storm. Going Inside a Storm ( Russian: Иду на грозу, romanized : Idu na grozu) is a 1966 Soviet drama film directed by Sergei Mikaelyan. It was based on the novel by Daniil Granin, who also wrote a screenplay together with Mikaelyan. [1] [2]

  5. They are seen in hands of Pavel Korchagin (Vladimir Konkin), Fyodor Zhukhrai (Konstantin Stepankov), Anton Tokarev (Fyodor Panasenko), Tonya Tumanova (Natalya Sayko), Rita Ustinovich (Antonina Leftiy) and various Red Army commanders, Cheka operatives, officers of Ukrainian National army and counter-revolutionary conspirators. Except for one instance, the revolvers are of anachronistic post-1930 version.

  6. Fyodor Korchagin was born on 12 April, 1905 in Odessa, Kherson Governorate, Russian Empire, is an Actor. Discover Fyodor Korchagin's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates.

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  8. The simple premise of Leonid Agranovich and Vladimir Semakov’s Chelovek kotoryy somnevaetsya (US: The Man Who Doubts) is one that fits neatly into the narrow confines of permissible crime stories in the Soviet Union: a noble police inspector, doubting the guilt of an accused murderer, sets off to find the real killer and protect the innocent.