

A KGB colonel's cozy retirement? Yeah, that's about to implode spectacularly.
Sergey Sergeyevich, a retired KGB colonel, has been enjoying his long-standing retirement. He remains fit and energetic, with little to complain about in life—he has everything he needs, even a mistress who dreams of marrying him. But one winter evening, two visitors arrive at his door.
Acting
Romashin's simmering denial—retirement as performance art.
Direction
Vasilevsky traps you in that apartment like a confession booth.

Director
Radomir Vasilevsky
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Made months after the USSR collapsed, it interrogates how perpetrators simply... retired. No trials, no truth commissions—just cozy apartments.
The 84-minute runtime mirrors Chekhov: compressed time, explosive history. Every object in that apartment is evidence.