To be honest, while the director could not change too much the “soviet settings” (apartments, streets, work and public places, which are relatively accurate and realistic although embelished),
he certainly sweetened and sugar-coated the characters and interactions. The movie was obviously made for international consumption, not just domestic, and certain elements were not realistic.
- Usually when a drunkard ex-husband would visit his ex-wife to ask for money for a “half-liter of vodka”, all neighbors would have a police number ready on the dial. Such spats usually ended in grotesque verbal and/or physical fights sometimes mixed with attempts to make up and kisses. A wife would not usually hand him last 5 rubles, and he would quietly leave. That scene was laughable. I quickly found a more realistic video of such encounter.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P1Oi5AUIHCM
- The main female character is too refined for a girl (in late 1950’s) from a remote town who came to Moscow to study on “quota/limited admissions/limita”. The boy’s family would never mistake such a girl (in real life) for a Professor’s daughter even with a posh apartment, because such “limita” girls usually had a very distinct “country side/small town” dialects (depending on where they came from) and very different demeanor and manners.
https://i.mycdn.me/image?id=849591596231&t=35&plc=WEB&tkn=*D6pJ6mbFIKtZwTMwLClC5JKQYMI
The other characters do look provincial enough, but not the main girl.
http://ic.pics.livejournal.com/garibalda/34408804/358373/358373_900.jpg
- The singles’ dating agency, as it is shown in the movie, is a director’s invention. There were small-room offices to place “a widow/widower looking for a spouse to spend remaining years with a companion” newspaper adverts, but not clubs for “singles”. It was not cool to advertise openly that you’re single, looking for a mate. It was done, but much more discretely, through friends or at public gatherings which did not advertise as “singles meeting events”.
- The “student dormitory” in the beginning of the film is a mental reminisce of early soviet propaganda about “happy communal student life”. Student dormitories for out-of-towners were not so happy and comfy.
http://img-fotki.yandex.ru/get/29/136187900.28/0_6d004_d04a6914_L.jpg
https://ic.pics.livejournal.com/maxim_nm/51556845/2673174/2673174_original.jpg
http://ura-inform.com/img/newses/campus-two-03(500x500)[66115].jpg
- The boys would NEVER start a fight near or inside the arches of an apartment complex, for several reasons. The fight can be seen from all angles by tenants and police would be called right away. Police would have access from both sides of the arches, and boys would have no place to run. When you wanted to beat up another someone, you lure or drag him inside the “garage row” which had garages on both ends and no view from the apartments.
https://i.ss.com/gallery/2/299/74599/garages-riga-bolderaya-14919606.800.jpg
But! if you have time and if you still want some “soviet realism” of 70/80’s, do watch
“Little Vera”…. Here is a perfectly legitimate youtube set of the film, in 9 segments (consecutive) with very good English subtitles. I strongly recommend if you want “an art movie and soviet realism”. It's kind of like "Soviet
Smithereens", even the main actress looks similar.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ab9XnGaA46M
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_d66pf3KgNo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Zhmj63ADxU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mqtyH4tYFdE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4eV2biLGClA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T7p6ACSPyPs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z3rd-rctHqM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GJu88JxW45k
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3kiGM5m7oco