As a director, he made his debut with the war film
The Land of the Earth (1964, together with Boris Yashin) based on the story of the same name by
Grigory Baklanov. Andrei Smirnov's first great success came when he directed the 1971 drama film
Belorussian Station, which showed the psychological atmosphere of events closely intertwined with the memory of the
Great Patriotic War. In his next film,
Autumn (1974), he turned to the theme of love, with an unusual for that time boldness about the relationship between the thirty-year-old man and woman. After the film
Faith and Truth (1979), devoted to different stages of the construction of Moscow, Smirnov decided to leave filmmaking. The reason was the criticism of various authorities and dissatisfaction with his own work. Smirnov began to work mainly as a screenwriter and playwright. His play
My Own in 1985 was staged by the
Moscow Satire Theatre. He wrote screenplays for the films
Sentimental Journey to Potatoes (1986),
I Did Everything I Could (1986), and also the episodes
The Medicine of Fear in the second season of television series
Beyond the Wolves (2004). In the 1990s, Smirnov staged television performances, television concerts, and theater productions. Among them -
Dinner in the
Moscow Art Theatre - Theater-Studio O. Tabakov (1994),
A Month in the Country in
Comédie-Française (1997). In 2011, he returned to filmmaking and made a national drama
Once Upon a Time There Lived a Simple Woman, acting simultaneously as a screenwriter and producer. The film won the
Nika Award for best film. It also received four more Nika Awards - for best script work, best female role, best supporting actor and best costume design. His 2019 film
A Frenchman won several awards, including
Nika Awards for best film and best director. ==Acting roles ==