The story starts in the
Soviet Union in 1953. As
Radio Moscow oversees a concert, one of the directors receives a call from
Joseph Stalin, the
General Secretary of the Communist Party, from a secure telephone line, ordering that a recording of the concert be delivered to him. Fearing for their lives, the directors order the in-progress concert to be hurriedly repeated and recorded in order to deliver it to the
NKVD, but the pianist,
Maria Yudina, stubbornly refuses to play because her family had been sent to the
Gulag by Stalin. The directors bribe her with 20,000
rubles, but as the concert ends, she hides a note to Stalin in the sleeve of the record – to the horror of one director – as the NKVD take the record away. Stalin reads the note in his
dacha; it says that Yudina prayed that
God will forgive him and that she decided to donate the money Stalin gave her to the
parish for restoration work. Stalin throws away the note, then suffers a
cerebral hemorrhage and becomes paralyzed. When Stalin is discovered by his maid and a guard, the first to be alerted to Stalin's declining health is
Lavrentiy Beria, the head of the
Ministry of Internal Affairs. He orders a soldier to take a girl he has raped home, and to then arrest her father. Beria goes to Stalin's dacha while making preparations for the "Glorious Future" of the state. After arriving, he steals Stalin's personal documents from the safe and gives them to one of his men. Beria then calls
Georgy Malenkov, the
Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers, to inform him of Stalin's declining health and to summon him to the dacha immediately. As Malenkov panics, Beria encourages him not to call the doctors because Stalin, sunk deep in paranoia,
believes there is a plot by Jewish doctors against him. Malenkov instead suggests they wait for the Central Committee to arrive and decide what to do next. The Committee arrives without
Vyacheslav Molotov, who is on Stalin's
list of enemies. The Committee decides that Lidiya Timashuk, a female doctor who accused her own colleagues of plotting to assassinate Stalin, should examine Stalin. Upon receiving medical confirmation that Stalin may not recover, Beria rushes off to
Lubyanka, authorizes the NKVD to put
Moscow and other major cities in lockdown to avoid unrest, and declares that the
Pravda newspaper is now the only source of information to be allowed in and out of Moscow. The NKVD brings Stalin's daughter
Svetlana to his bedside; she had distanced herself from her father and has grown critical of him for arresting her lover
Aleksei Kapler. Stalin's son
Vasily also returns. The American-made
artificial ventilator is found to be incompatible with the Soviet electrical plug; without it, Stalin dies. Doctors remove his brain and organs for further study; Vasily, furious, kills many of them and is arrested. After the incident, Beria orders the NKVD troops to loot Stalin's dacha, evacuate his house servants and execute witnesses. As the news of Stalin's death spreads throughout the Soviet Union, Maria smiles happily while much of the populace mourns. Beria visits
Polina, Molotov's wife, who was believed to be dead, and reveals to her that he falsified her death to Stalin because Stalin intended to use her life as a bargaining chip to buy Molotov's loyalty. During the Central Committee meeting, Malenkov is named the
chairman of the council of ministers while being controlled by Beria, who is now promoted to
first deputy chairman. Beria sidelines Khrushchev by putting him in charge of Stalin's funeral. Svetlana begins having a nightmare of her father arresting her lover and cold-heartedly arranging her marriage to someone else. A telephone call wakes her up and the caller demands that she attend her father's funeral under orders of the committee. She rushes to the place where the funeral is being held, only to realize that it is just a rehearsal. Meanwhile, Beria is enraged at Khrushchev for allowing a crowd of mourners to enter Moscow by train because Beria believes that large crowds may start a
revolution. After Svetlana refuses to attend her father's funeral, Beria convinces Malenkov to allow Vasily to attend Stalin's funeral as Stalin's only living son. As
Stalin's funeral commences, a large crowd of mourners reaches the city. The NKVD guards fire warning shots but the crowd continues to march and begins singing
the Internationale while throwing rocks at the guards. One of the rocks hits an officer and he orders the guards to open fire on the crowd. After the carnage ends, the officer shows regret, kneeling in a state of shock. After the funeral, Vasily becomes drunk at the official party, slips into hysteria, and begins yelling loudly that he believes that his father was assassinated. Vasily's commanding officer strips him of his rank and
discharges him from the military. Vasily is arrested again for inviting foreign journalists to Moscow without authorization. Beria, fearing for Vasily's life, suggests to Malenkov that they should send him to an
asylum to avoid
court-martial. As Malenkov walks to his car, Khrushchev shows up and asks for a ride to his dacha. Khrushchev convinces Malenkov to join him in a coup against Beria; Malenkov agrees out of fear that one day Beria will turn on him. Khrushchev, Malenkov, and Molotov have a discussion on Molotov's apartment's balcony, as they know that Beria is using its
telephone to listen in on the interior of the apartment. Molotov is enraged at Beria for disobeying Stalin's order to execute Polina and agrees to join Khrushchev's coup, but he demands a total purge of the NKVD, similar to the 1936
Great Purge. Khrushchev suggests that Marshall
Zhukov join the coup because Zhukov dislikes Beria and because the conspirators need the army. At an unknown asylum, Vasily's mental condition deteriorates. He continues to believe that he will live under his father's shadow for eternity, and he begins telling Beria about the night his
mother committed suicide. Then he becomes unresponsive, and Beria asks the nurse to get Vasily something "strong" before leaving with a sorrowful expression. Three months later, Khrushchev, Malenkov, and Molotov initiate their coup and signal Zhukov to arrest Beria, who surrenders without much resistance. In prison, Beria remarks that he knew this day would come as he slowly walks toward his execution. Beria, being cynical, knows that the press will label him a traitor and remarks about how much power the
Party wields by fabricating the truth. Elsewhere, during a concert, Maria jokes to one of the musicians about two NKVD officers being happy at Beria's execution because he raped both of their daughters, to the discomfort of her associates. Before the firing squad executes Beria, his final thought is: "They've washed their hands in my blood and now they want to start afresh, to look ahead towards a Glorious Future." ==Reception==