The new Alexander Sokurov movie, "Alexandra," is like most of Sokurov's movies: far more beguiling than its title sounds. "Russian Ark," for instance, from 2002, was more than a walk around the Hermitage Museum. It was a choreographed waltz that elevated history into reverie.
This time the surfaces are prosaic, too. He's sent an old woman named Alexandra Nikolaevna to visit her soldier grandson at a barracks during Russia's second war with Chechnya. But because the filmmaker is Sokurov, ever keen to bridge matters of the heart with the practice of art, this isn't just any old lady dropping in for a visit. The actress is Galina Vishnevskaya, the 81-year-old Russian opera star and the subject of a previous Sokurov documentary. Her combination of frumpiness and regality dominate the proceedings - the diva having a grand babushka moment.