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- 8î CINEMA, Page 81Real-Life Red October
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- A Soviet naval officer and a band of co-conspirators lock
- the captain of their ship in his cabin, tie up the other
- officers and head for asylum in the West. Military authorities
- learn of the mutiny and set out in pursuit. Sound similar to The
- Hunt for Red October? No wonder. The incident, revealed last
- week in the Soviet newspaper Izvestia, turns out to have been
- the real-life basis for Tom Clancy's blockbuster, the film
- version of which, starring Sean Connery, is now playing across
- the U.S.
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- The mutineer was Valery Sablin, deputy commander of the
- destroyer Storozhevoi. In Izvestia's account, Sablin made his
- bold move in November 1975, after most of the ship's 250-man
- crew had gone on shore leave in Riga, the capital of Latvia. The
- alarm was sounded by a sailor who jumped overboard as the ship
- was leaving harbor and by an officer who untied himself and
- radioed, "Mutiny aboard: We are off to the high seas." The
- apparent destination was Sweden, although another press report
- last week suggested that Sablin was actually heading for
- Leningrad to demand reforms of the Soviet system over nationwide
- TV. The ship was halted by aircraft fire near Sweden, and the
- conspirators were put on trial. Sablin was sentenced to death
- by firing squad.
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- Clancy first read of the incident in 1976, when the
- Washington Post carried an unconfirmed report. He got more
- details in 1982 from a master's thesis written by a student at
- the U.S. Naval Academy. Clancy acknowledges taking considerable
- dramatic license: his defecting submarine commander makes it
- safely to the U.S. after much cold war derring-do. "My book has a
- historical foundation," says the author. "But it is a work of
- fiction."
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