Slave of Love
Slave of Love is a 1976 film by Nikita Mikhalkov.
Olga Voznesenskaya is a silent screen star whose pictures are so popular that underground revolutionaries risk capture to see them. She's in southern Russia filming a tear-jerker as the Bolsheviks get closer to Moscow. Although married, she spends time every day with Victor Pototsky, the film's cameraman. Gradually, it comes to light that Victor uses his job as a cover for filming White atrocities and Red heroism: he's a Bolshevik. He asks her for help, and she discovers meaning in her otherwise flighty and self-centered life. Love blooms. Will the Red forces arrive in time to save them from a suspicious White military leader? Will she find courage?
Tropes used in Slave of Love include:
- Crowning Music of Awesome: "Mechta" and "I veter unyos yeyo sharf" by Eduard Artemyev.
- Humans Are the Real Monsters: "Gentlemen, you are beasts!"
- One-Woman Wail
- Red October
- Scenery Porn
- Tear Jerker
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