| Sandrine
Bonnaire, Oleg Menshikov , Catherine Deneuve, Sergei Bodrov Jr.
, Ruben Tapiero .
French director Regis Wargnier's fifth
feature film is a romantic period drama which is also a tribute
to the victims of a tragic Stalinist episode. In June 1946, Stalin
launched a major propaganda campaign aimed at Russians who had settled
in the West, offering them amnesty and an opportunity to be involved
in the postwar restructuring of the USSR. Many people who believed
Stalin and returned home were executed, interned, or subjected to
repression. The protagonist of Est-Ouest, Alexei Golovin (Oleg Menshikov),
takes his young French wife Marie (Sandrine Bonnaire) and son Serioja
with him on the long journey back to his native land that he has
missed so much. On the board of the steamship taking them to Odessa,
people like them celebrate the new life that they anticipate. However,
reality strikes when they reach shore. Many people are immediately
executed or sent to work camps. Alexei is spared to use his skill
as an accomplished doctor. He is sent to Kiev to work in a dispensary
and live in a communal apartment. Alexei accepts his fate but Marie
dreams of escaping to freedom. Opportunity comes her way when she
meets Gabrielle Develay (Catherine Deneuve), a famous French actress
on tour, passing through Kiev. Tension mounts as the relationship
of Alexei and Marie is put to test. For the script of this co-production
between France and Russia, Wargnier had three other collaborators:
Louis Gardel, who had previously collaborated with Wargnier on Indochine;
Sergei Bodrov, a well-known Russian filmmaker best-known for his
award winning S.E.R. and The Prisoner of the Mountains; and Azeri
scriptwriter Rustam Ibragimbekov, best remembered for his scripts
of Nikita Mikhalkov films. |