East-West (1999)
Director: Régis Wargnier
Movie review
From Time Out Film Guide
In 1946 Russian emigrants flock back to the USSR, answering Stalin's invitation to help rebuild the ravaged motherland. Docking at Odessa, Dr Alexei (Menchikov) and his French wife Marie (Bonnaire) find, however, that many fellow returnees are sent to labour camps. Alexei's professional status wins the couple and their son a room in a Kiev apartment, but as the grimness of their new lives sinks in, the confiscation of their passports makes return to the West an apparent impossibility. Then a chance encounter with a touring French actress (Deneuve) offers a chink of hope. After the colonial gloss of Indochine and Une Femme Française, it's a surprise to find director Wargnier shivering under the grey skies of the former Soviet Union; but with this tale of love and betrayal offset by a dark political backdrop, accompanied by Patrick Doyle's grandiose score, it's evident he's taking Doctor Zhivago as his new model. If you expect a credible historical drama, this falls short, but as an old-fashioned Hollywood wallow it works rather well.Author: TJ
Cast & crew
Director: Régis Wargnier
Producer: Yves Marmion
Cast: Sandrine Bonnaire, Oleg Menchikov, Sergei Bodrov Jr, Catherine Deneuve, Tatiana Doguileva, René Feret, Grigori Manoukov, Atanass Atanassov full cast
Genre(s): Period/Swashbucklers
Duration: 125 mins
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