At Home Among Strangers

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At Home Among Strangers

A 1974 Soviet movie poster
Directed by Nikita Mikhalkov
Written by Eduard Volodarsky
Nikita Mikhalkov
Starring Anatoly Solonitsyn
Music by Eduard Artemyev
Cinematography Pavel Lebeshev
Editing by Lyudmila Yelyan
Distributed by RUSCICO (DVD)
Release date(s) Flag of Finland September 26, 1975
Running time 93 min.
Country Soviet Union (Russia)
Language Russian
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

At Home among Strangers is a 1974 film starring Anatoly Solonitsyn and directed by Nikita Mikhalkov. Its Russian language title is Svoy sredi chuzhikh, chuzhoy sredi svoikh/Свой среди чужих, чужой среди своих. Some hail it as the most significant of osterns. Like many Soviet films of the period, it was mainly in colour, but had certain short scenes in black and white.

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Its English title has numerous variants, and this in part has hindered success in English speaking countries, along with particularly bad dubbing when it was first released in them. Variants range from a full length translation of the Russian title - At home amongst strangers, a stranger amongst friends to At home among the Strangers.

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.
VHS cover
VHS cover

The setting is post-Russian Civil War, during the reconstruction of the young Soviet republic. During the war, Shilov, Sarichev, Kungorov, Zabelin and Lipyagin had become great friends.

There are two main plots in the film, the first involving the theft of gold by outlaws just after the Russian civil war. Though the cannons are now silent, the enemy continues to harass the Soviets. The regional committee sends a precious shipment of gold by train to Moscow, and a group of Cheka soldiers led by Shilov are entrusted with the responsibility of guarding it. The gold is needed to buy bread from overseas to feed the starving population. When the train is attacked by bandits, the guards are killed and the gold stolen. Shilov is kidnapped before the train sets off, and is dumped in the street, pumped full of drugs, after the attack. He is suspected of treason, partly because his brother was a "White", which is where the second plot comes in. Shilov must infiltrate the enemy camp to find the gold, hence the title. The second plot involves the Shilov's desire to clear his name of murder, and he must find out who killed his friend. During his efforts, Shilov uncovers a web of deceit and treachery, which allowed the robbery to succeed. The story of a hero battling against corruption and greed echoes the cattle baron or railroad Westerns.

The film also has male cameraderie as a subplot, as the initial joy of demobbed Red Army soldiers returning from the Revolution is sorely tested. It has strong parallels in some ways with Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid in its look, period setting, and strong action sequences, which are still famous in Russia, involving literal cliffhangers, white water rafting, chases on horseback, holding up trains etc.

Cinema of Russia
Cinema of the Russian Empire (Pre 1917)  • Cinema of the Soviet Union (1917-1990)

Actors • Animation • Directors • Films A-Z • Chronology of films • Cinematographers • Composers • Editors • Producers • Screenwriters •


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