During the production of
War and Peace at
Mosfilm in 1964, an elderly
Russian noblewoman is set to appear as an
extra. The film's
political commissar demands her dismissal due to her aristocratic background, but director
Sergei Bondarchuk is adamant that she stays. In 1916, Captain Alexander Kolchak's ship is laying
naval mines in the
Baltic Sea when they are blocked by of the
Imperial German Navy. Kolchak leads his men in
Russian Orthodox prayers for protection as they lure the German ship towards their mines and it sinks. At the naval base in the
Grand Duchy of Finland, Kolchak is promoted to
rear admiral and introduced to
Anna Timiryova, the wife of subordinate officer and close friend Captain Sergei Timirev. Although Sergei reminds his wife, that they took vows before God, Anna is unmoved and wants nothing more than to be with the Admiral. Terrified of losing Kolchak, his wife Sofya offers to leave for
Petrograd, but Kolchak is adamant about their marriage. When Anna delivers a letter to Kolchak he informs her that they can never meet, professing his love for her. Tsar
Nicholas II personally promotes Kolchak to
vice admiral and commander of the
Black Sea Fleet at
Sevastopol. After the
February Revolution in 1917, Tsarist officers are disarmed and
executed at the
Kronstadt naval base. Sergei barely escapes with Anna. A group of enlisted men arrive aboard Kolchak's flotilla demanding all officers surrender their arms. Kolchak orders his subordinates to obey and throws his own sword into the harbour. Kolchak is summoned by
Alexander Kerensky and offered the position of Minister of Defense. Kolchak accepts on the condition they restore old
Imperial Army practices. Kerensky refuses and offers him exile in the United States, ostensibly because the
Allies need him as an expert to take
Constantinople by naval attack. Shortly after, his wife and son are rescued from their home in Crimea and whisked away to a British ship, just before the house is attacked by
Red Guards. In 1918, Anna and Sergei are travelling on the
Trans-Siberian Railway when she learns Kolchak is setting up an anti-Bolshevik army in
Omsk. Sergei is dismayed when Anna announces that she is leaving him and becomes a nurse in the
Russian Civil War. Kolchak learns the
Red Army is advancing on Omsk, he orders an evacuation and seizes
Irkutsk as the new capital of anti-communist Russia. Anna is recognized by a White officer who informs Kolchak; they meet and he vows never to leave her again, explaining he has asked Sofya for divorce. He proposes to Anna, but she insists that there is no need for marriage. Eventually, she relents and they are seen attending the
Divine Liturgy together. Meanwhile, Irkutsk is under the nominal control of French General
Maurice Janin and the
Czechoslovak Legion. With their defenses disintegrating, the Red Army offers a way out alive. As a result, General Janin agrees to hand over Kolchak. Kolchak and Anna are arrested by the Czechs and handed over to the Reds. Reinforcements, led by Kolchak's ally General
Vladimir Kappel, eventually reach Irkutsk just in time to rescue Kolchak; however the offensive fails. Kolchak is put on trial by the Irkutsk
soviet and executed with his former Prime Minister along the banks of the frozen
Angara River. His last words are, "Send word to my wife in Paris that I bless our son". Their bodies are dumped into an opening in the ice, hewn up by the local Orthodox clergy for the
Great Blessing of Waters on
Theophany. The story then returns to 1964 at Mosfilm. It is revealed that Anna is the noblewoman who appears as an extra in
War and Peace. As she witnesses a rehearsal for one of the film's ballroom scenes, she recalls her first meeting with Kolchak, and her dreams of the formal dance she was never able to share with her beloved.
Epilogue • Anna was arrested numerous times following Kolchak's execution and survived nearly 40 years in the
Gulag before her release in 1960. She died in Moscow in January 1975, aged 81. • Sergei became a rear admiral commanding the White Russian Navy in Siberia before fleeing to China, where he captained Chinese steamers. He settled in
Shanghai's White Russian community, where he died in 1932. • Sophya Kolchak joined her son in exile in Paris. She died in the
Longjumeau Hospital in 1956. • Kolchak's son Rostislav fought with the
Free French Forces during the
Second World War. He died in Paris in 1965. == Cast ==