Acclaimed director Vitaly Mansky (Putin's Witnesses) makes himself at home with a man who helped to shape the 20th century: Mikhail Gorbachev. The Soviet leader, who brought about the fall of the Berlin Wall, was acclaimed as the architect of Glasnost and Perestroika, policies that gave the citizens of the Soviet Union-what Ronald Reagan called "the Evil Empire"-a chance to be free. At the same time, under his rule, the Chernobyl nuclear facility exploded and its destruction was concealed. This intimate portrait finds Gorbachev living alone in an empty house outside Moscow, carrying the burdens of his past.
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