

Panfilov's 28 Men
USSR, November, 1941. Based on the account by Vasiliy Koroteev this is the story of Panifilov's Twenty-Eight, a group of twenty-eight Red Army soldiers commanded by General Ivan Panfilov, that stopped the advance on Moscow of a column of fifty-four Nazi tanks of the 11th Panzer Division for several days. Though lightly armed they fight tirelessly and defiantly, with uncommon bravery and unwavering dedication, to protect Moscow and their Motherland.
Director(s)
Kim Druzhinin
Where to watch

Plex
Free

Plex Channel
Free
Cast & crew

Yuriy Golubev
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Aleksandr Plaksin
Kryuchkov

Aleksandr Kovalyov
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Sergey Korenkov
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Azamat Nigmanov
Musabek Sengirbaev

Aleksandr Ustyugov
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Alexey Morozov
Vasiliy Klochkov

Yakiv Kucherevskyi
Serzhant Dobrobabin

Oleg Fyodorov
Grigory Shemyakin, foreman

Aleksej Longin
Pavel Gundilovich

Dmitriy Girev
Bondarenko

Amadu Mamadakov
Alikbay Kosaev

Andrey Shalyopa
Lieutenant

Pavel Goncharov
Natarov
Nikolay Klimchuk
Petrenko

Vitaliy Kovalenko
Shepetkov

Anton Filipenko
Timofeev

Anton Kuznetsov
Fedor Ivanovich Reshetnikov, major, battalion commander

Sergey Agafonov
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Aziz Beyshenaliev
Leitenant Bulatov

Dmitriy Murashev
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Andrey Nekrasov
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Aleksey Shutov
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Oleg Senchenko
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Andrey Bodrenkov
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Lidiya Milyuzina
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Dmitriy Sutyrin
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Sergey Yatsenyuk
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Ivan Batarev
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Maksim Belborodov
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Nikolay Kiy
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Mikhail Dernov
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Nikolay Klyamchuk
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Alexey Aleshkin
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Vitaly Khadzhiev
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Vasily Mitkin
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Kim Druzhinin
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Details
Reviews
Wuchak
_**Eastern Front drama and action as the Red Army clashes with aggressing Nazi hordes**_ In mid-November, 1941, the remaining 28 men of a Soviet division protect Moscow from German invaders with vastly superior weaponry on a snowy landscape. "Panfilov’s 28" (2016) is surprisingly well done on a technical level for a film that only had a budget of $1,700,000 (thru crowd-funding). If you like Eastern Front WW2 films like “Cross of Iron” (1977), "Dear Elza!" (2014) and "T-34" (2018), you’ll probably appreciate it, but IMHO it’s the least of these. At the same time, I have a friend who ranks it as one of his favorites. The problem for me is that there’s zero action until the 39-minute mark and the conversations of the men up to that point, while well-written/executed, are relatively dull. Furthermore, this is a straight war flick that honors the heroes of the (supposedly) true-life battle near Dubosekovo, so don’t expect any unlikely romances or twists. Like “Gettysburg” (1993), it’s simply about modern warfare, the men who fight it and their reasons for fighting. Despite the realism of everything, including the trench-oriented combat, the movie strangely put me to sleep (but maybe I was just tired). The story is, in essence, the Soviet version of 300 Spartans with one of the soldiers even bringing up that historical account during a march. But the account has proven to be a fabrication of a Soviet newspaper for propaganda purposes. However, it IS true that small groups of Red Army soldiers on the Eastern Front boldly faced hordes of oncoming Germans troops with superior firepower to protect their Motherland. And it’s not like Americans and Brits haven’t made scores of fantastical WW2 pictures with some amount of historical realism, like “Where Eagles Dare” (1968) and “Fury” (2014). One thing that’s amazing is that almost all the tanks used in the movie are miniatures and I didn’t even notice! Except for one actual-size model tank built for the movie, the tanks are 1:16 detailed models. The sequences shot inside the tank, however, used a full-scale model of tank internals. The film runs about 2 hours and was shot at Ivanovo, Ivanovskaya oblast, Russia, with studio stuff done in St. Petersburg. GRADE: C+
