Na de Lente van ’68: een kleine liefdesgeschiedenis (2001)
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After the spring of ’68 is a film about falling in love across a
political, cultural and geographic divide. It tells of Simon, a Dutch student in Moscow, who meets and marries Russian Zoya in the spring of 1968. Simon returns to the Netherlands, expecting his wife to follow shortly afterwards when her exit visa is granted. Her application is refused, but the couple are determined to overcome the political bariers to their love and be reunited. A child is born to Zoya in Moscow: director Aliona van der Horst relates her parents’ struggle in this tender account of family history caught up in international politics.
In the climate of the Cold War, any request to leave the Soviet Union was regarded with suspicion by Soviet authorities. When the Soviet Union invaded Czechoslovakia in 1968, the world watched this act of violence in dismay. Communists across the world were appalled and felt alienated from Soviet politics, the Dutch communist party being no exception. Officials in Moscow attempted to make Zoya a pawn in the political game of restoring relations. Dutch communist party representatives refused to help Simon and Zoya by writing to the Soviets. Placing his personal situation in this political context, Simon states in the film that party politics showed itself to be inadequate in dealing with human problems: ‘The idea I had wasn’t fulfilled. That hurts'.
In April 1972, on the tenth application, an exit visa was finally granted to Zoya. This turn around was just as unexpected as the nine rejections had been. Simon and Zoya were reunited in the Netherlands, but nothing was as they had hoped. The strain and disappointments of the years of separation had taken their toll.
To tell her parents’ story, Van der Horst weaves together archival footage, home movies and photographs with contemporary interviews. Simon shows love letters to his beloved Zoya that he has not read since writing them 30 years previously. These provide a linking thread through the film, expressing Simon's commitment to Zoya and feelings of helplessness: ‘Our happiness depends on how the political wind blows’. The film constructs a rich visual fabric, evoking memories, passions and regrets, and explores how an intimate human story was affected so strongly by world history. After the spring of ’68 is a tale of determination and disappointment that testifies to the strength of the human spirit.