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The Living and the Dead (Zhivye i Myortvye)
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The Living and the Dead (Russian Title: Zhivye i Myortvye / Живые и мёртвые) is a 1964 World War II drama directed by Aleksandr Stolper and based on a novel by Konstantin Simonov. The early days of the German invasion in the Soviet Union. Soviet troops have suffered one defeat after another. The Red Army retreats to Moscow. Military correspondent Ivan Sintsov (Kirill Lavrov) is a witness to these tragic events.
The following weapons are featured in the film The Living and the Dead (Zhivye i Myortvye):
Handguns
Tokarev TT-33
File:ZhivyeIMyortvye-TT.jpg
Seriously wounded Lieutenant General Kozyrev (Vladimir Marenkov) fires his Tokarev TT-33 at Russian soldiers. By mistake he confused them with the Germans
Nagant M1895
Submachine Guns
PPSh-41
![](/images/thumb/9/96/Zhivye_i_Myortvye-PPSh-1.jpg/600px-Zhivye_i_Myortvye-PPSh-1.jpg)
Lieutenant of Tank Forces holds his PPSh-41 submachine gun
![](/images/thumb/b/b8/ZhivyeIMyortvye-PPSh2.jpg/600px-ZhivyeIMyortvye-PPSh2.jpg)
Ivan Sintsov (Kirill Lavrov) with his PPSh-41
MP40
![](/images/thumb/5/57/Zhivye_i_Myortvye-MP40-4.jpg/600px-Zhivye_i_Myortvye-MP40-4.jpg)
Russian gunners armed with captured MP40 submachine guns
![](/images/thumb/5/5e/Zhivye_i_Myortvye-MP40-8.jpg/600px-Zhivye_i_Myortvye-MP40-8.jpg)
Battalion Commissar Sergei Shmakov (Lev Lyubetskiy) holds captured MP40. Also can see the Soviet BT-7 light cavalry tank to the right.
Rifles
Mosin Nagant Rifle
![](/images/thumb/a/a9/Zhivye_i_Myortvye-Mosin-2.jpg/600px-Zhivye_i_Myortvye-Mosin-2.jpg)
Russian soldiers fire their full-length Mosin Nagant Rifles at German aircraft
Shotguns
12 Gauge Double Barreled Shotgun
Machine Guns
Degtyaryov DP-27
![](/images/thumb/c/ca/Zhivye_i_Myortvye-DP-5.jpg/600px-Zhivye_i_Myortvye-DP-5.jpg)
Russian soldier carries the Degtyaryov DP-27 light machine gun
MG34 Machine Gun
![](/images/thumb/6/6c/Zhivye_i_Myortvye-MG34-1.jpg/600px-Zhivye_i_Myortvye-MG34-1.jpg)
Soviet artillery Petty Officer holds captured MG34 machine gun
Maxim M1910/30
![](/images/thumb/2/2d/Zhivye_i_Myortvye-Maxim-1.jpg/600px-Zhivye_i_Myortvye-Maxim-1.jpg)
Red Army soldiers fire the Maxim machine gun at German aircraft
37-mm M1939 (61-K)
![](/images/thumb/c/ca/Zhivye_i_Myortvye-61K-2.jpg/600px-Zhivye_i_Myortvye-61K-2.jpg)
The M1939 (61-K) automatic air defense guns can be seen to the left. To the right you can see 152 mm howitzer-gun M1937 (ML-20) towed by Soviet AT-S Artillery Tractor. This is an anachronism. AT-S entered service in the middle of 1950s
Anti-tank rifles
PTRS-41
![](/images/thumb/2/20/Zhivye_i_Myortvye-PTRS-1.jpg/600px-Zhivye_i_Myortvye-PTRS-1.jpg)
Russian anti-tank riflemen carry their PTRS-41 anti-tank rifle
PTRD-41
![](/images/thumb/b/b9/Zhivye_i_Myortvye-PTRD-1.jpg/600px-Zhivye_i_Myortvye-PTRD-1.jpg)
Russian anti-tank riflemen carry their PTRD-41 AT rifle
Hand Grenades
Model 24 Stielhandgranate
![](/images/thumb/4/47/Zhivye_i_Myortvye-MP40-7.jpg/600px-Zhivye_i_Myortvye-MP40-7.jpg)
Russian soldier with the M24 Grenade at the belt
Other
45mm anti-tank gun M1937 (53-K)
![](/images/thumb/7/73/Zhivye_i_Myortvye-53K-01.jpg/600px-Zhivye_i_Myortvye-53K-01.jpg)
Russian gunners and their 45mm anti-tank gun M1937 (53-K)