A Gentleman in Moscow
Ewan McGregor finds humanity in Soviet confinement
A Gentleman in Moscow works because it trusts McGregor to carry quiet moments and does not need to shout about its themes. It is a glimpse behind Moscow's curtain, one attic room at a time. Worth watching if you appreciate character over spectacle.
- Director
- Ben Vanstone
- Genre
- Drama
- Runtime
- varies
- Country
- GB
- Min. Age
- 18+
- Year
- 2024
- Type
- TV-Show
- Seasons
- 1 / 8 Ep.
Main Cast
Harry's Movie Review
A Gentleman in Moscow follows Count Alexander Rostov after the Russian revolution strips him of everything. He is confined to a single attic room in a grand hotel, cut off from the world outside. The premise could sink into melodrama easily, but the series avoids that trap. McGregor anchors the whole thing, and the show lets him do the work.
McGregor does not need elaborate gestures to convey loss. Watch his face when he realizes what his new life means. The supporting cast, particularly Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Johnny Harris, and Fehinti Balogun, fill out the hotel's ecosystem without feeling like they are checking boxes. These are people with their own weight, not just props in Rostov's story. The interactions feel lived in rather than written.
Ben Vanstone keeps the tone grounded. There are moments where you feel the temptation to swell the music and deliver a speech about dignity or survival, but mostly the show resists. It moves at the pace of a man learning to exist within four walls, which means sometimes nothing dramatic happens. That is not a flaw here, though viewers expecting constant forward momentum may feel the drag.
What lingered after finishing was not the grandeur of Rostov's past or the injustice of his circumstances. It was the small discovery that meaning can live in friendship and observation and the routines of ordinary days. The hotel becomes less a prison and more a world unto itself. That shift happens quietly, without being announced.
Key Facts
- Director
- Ben Vanstone
- Genre
- Drama
- Year
- 2024
- Runtime
- varies
- Country
- GB
- Content Rating
- TV-MA (18+)
- Harry's Rating
- 7 / 10
- Main Cast
- Ewan McGregor, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Johnny Harris, Fehinti Balogun, Alexa Goodall, Leah Harvey, Marcus Hodson
Watch Movie Teaser
Trivia & Fun Facts
- The hotel setting becomes almost a character itself, reflecting different eras of Russian history through its architecture and inhabitants
- Ben Vanstone directs with restraint, allowing long scenes to breathe without relying on dramatic camera work or cutting to rush the pacing
- The series was released in 2024, giving audiences a contemporary look at a story set firmly in the Soviet era
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes, if you value character-driven storytelling and do not need explosions or constant plot momentum. McGregor delivers a restrained, intelligent performance that makes the confinement feel real rather than claustrophobic in a cheap way.
After the Russian Revolution, Count Alexander Rostov is stripped of his wealth and sentenced to live in a single attic room of a grand hotel. The series explores how he discovers meaning and connection within the hotel's world, despite being isolated from life outside.
Ewan McGregor leads the cast as Count Rostov, with Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Johnny Harris, Fehinti Balogun, Alexa Goodall, Leah Harvey, and Marcus Hodson in supporting roles throughout the ensemble.
No. The series is a fictional adaptation of a novel, creating an imagined narrative set against the backdrop of Soviet Moscow rather than recounting historical events.
Check your local streaming platforms for availability, or consult a streaming guide for current options in your region. The series is available on various digital platforms and may be available on physical media.
A Gentleman in Moscow is a television series rather than a single film, so it contains multiple episodes that extend beyond a standard movie runtime.
Harry's Final Thoughts
Harry's Closing Curtain
A Gentleman in Moscow earns your time by refusing to manipulate you into feeling things. McGregor inhabits Rostov with genuine dignity, and the supporting cast fills the hotel with real texture. It is a story about discovering that life matters even when the world has left you behind. Watch it for the performances and the patience. It will not disappoint you if you meet it halfway.
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