Years before becoming a renowned film writer-director in the
Soviet Union, Ukrainian born filmmaker Pyotr Todorovsky (father of filmmaker
Valery Todorovsky) worked as a cinematographer for the Georgian born auteur
Marlen Khutsiev. Starting out as
co-cinematographer with Spring on Zarechnaya Street before working his
way up towards directing his own features, Todorovsky eventually directed the
1983 drama Wartime Romance which garnered an Academy Award nomination
for Best Foreign Language Film, the last Soviet film to do so. In between those projects, three years
separating each one, Todorovsky went on to do the free-spirited musical Through
Main Street with an Orchestra before embarking on effectively his most
popular and perhaps his most controversial work up to that time: the 1989 Leningrad
prostitution perestroika Intergirl.
Adapted from Vladimir Kunin’s 1988 novel of the same name
based on studies of the activities of prostitutes in Leningrad hotels, Intergirl
concerns Leningrad based nurse Tanya Zaitseva (Elena Yakovleva) who works under
the radar at night as a prostitute servicing foreigners for some extra cash. One night she receives an unexpected marriage
proposal from a wealthy Swedish client named Edvard Larsen (Tomas Laustiola) who
promises to set her up for life. That
doesn’t stop her from being accosted by cops after her and several other
prostitutes in the region are arrested, sending Tanya home to her mother Alla
(Larisa Malevannaya) who has been estranged from her runaway husband and kept
in the dark about her double life thinking Tanya is just a nurse.
--Andrew Kotwicki