- Film adaptation of Anton Chekhov's story of life in rural Russia during the latter part of the 19th century.
- Aging actress Irina Arkadina pays summer visits to her brother Pjotr Nikolayevich Sorin and her son Konstantin on a country estate. On one occasion, she brings along Boris Trigorin, a successful novelist. Nina, a free and innocent girl on a neighboring estate, falls in love with Trigorin. As he lightly consumes and rejects her, so the actress consumed and rejected her son all his life. The victims are destroyed while the sophisticates continue on their way.—alfiehitchie
- Konstantin is an emotional, passionate young aspiring writer who wants to write on his own terms, not in any conventional manner. He has written a play which is unconventional in both structure and theme. He wants to show it to a small group of people at a makeshift outdoor theater at his Uncle Sorin's lakeside estate in the Russian countryside. The group includes his actress mother Arkadina and her lover, famed writer Trigorin. Arkadina and Trigorin are both self-absorbed with their own fame and dismiss Konstantin's writing ability. The only person who seems to have any faith in his writing is Dorn, Sorin's doctor. Konstantin has gotten Nina, the daughter of a neighboring landowner, to appear as the lead in the play. Konstantin loves Nina, but it's not mutual. Although she carries on with poor local schoolteacher Medvedenko, Sorin's estate's bailiff's daughter Masha loves Konstantin, but that love isn't mutual either. Nina wants to become an actress, but she seems more enthralled with the idea of celebrity than with actually being an actress. The question becomes whether any of these individuals can reach ultimate happiness with their competing desires.—Huggo
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