In 1985, during the period of
Perestroika in the
Soviet Union, the musical group
Laskovyi Mai was formed. Their concerts were always sold out, and their immense popularity led to mass adoration—some fans even committed suicide due to unrequited love for the band’s members. The fame of the band’s creator,
Andrei Razin, soon overshadowed that of
Mikhail Gorbachev himself. A childhood photograph of Razin with the Gorbachev family, taken by chance on a beach, changed his fate. Using the photo, Razin hinted that he was related to Gorbachev, which opened all doors for him—television, radio, and the Soviet stage. Razin began traveling across orphanages throughout the USSR, recruiting talented children for multiple touring versions of
Laskovyi Mai. The group performed in several cities simultaneously, sometimes giving five to six concerts per day. During its seven-year existence,
Laskovyi Mai never had an unsold ticket; nearly one in five Soviet citizens attended one of their concerts. The film shows how the story ends differently for each character. The young musicians, particularly lead singer
Yuri Shatunov, achieve fame; Razin earns his greatest fortune; and two unfortunate female fans, after being raped by gangsters, commit suicide. By the end of 1991, as Gorbachev resigns from the presidency and the cultural house faces closure, the band performs one final concert to a full audience — an overwhelming success. == Cast ==