The Shield and the Sword (film)


The Shield and the Sword is a 1968 Soviet spy series in four parts directed by Vladimir Basov. It is based on a novel by Vadim Kozhevnikov, who was Secretary of the Soviet Writers' Union. It was a highly influential in the Soviet Union, inspiring many, including Vladimir Putin, to join the KGB.
The song What Does Motherland Begin With, sung by Mark Bernes, that was main musical theme of each film in the series, became well known in the USSR.

Parts

The year is 1940 and Nazi Germany is at the height of its military power, having captured most of Europe and eyeing the Soviet Union to the East. The Soviet military command suspects hostile intent from Germany and so arranges for its spies to infiltrate ranks of the German military and the SS. Alexander Belov is a Russian spy, who travels from Soviet-held Latvia to Nazi Germany under an alias of Volksdeutsche Johann Weiss. His mastery of the German language, steel nerves and an ability to manipulate others help him to use his connections in the SS to ascend the ladder of the Abwehr and then in the SD. He uses his position to identify sympathetic Germans, who help him to procure vital intelligence, and to help local resistance movements in their collective fight against Nazism.

Cast

, writing in the London Times in February 2020, described the series as "truly bad television, raw Soviet propaganda, alternately clunky and schmaltzy." In the final scene "our wounded spy-hero is reunited with his elderly mother.... You would need a heart of stone not to laugh at it."