Well the clue to the plot is in the title, but luckily it has a really powerful performance from Iya Savvina as the eponymous, pregnant, character who proves strong and determined despite a disabling limp to help this really stand out. Her lively gypsy community farm has something of the survival of the fittest to it, and she isn't really anyone's choice for a wife amidst the boorish citizens who make up her village. Even the father of her unborn child shows little interest, though her affection for him is clear for all to see. The thing is, her's isn't a desire for something from fairy tale either. She is just as capable as many of the men - just ask the hapless "Stepan" (Aleksandr Surin), and her emotional needs don't require the trappings of traditional romance, per se. Her's is as much a desire to be accepted and loved for whom she is, and that's quite a challenge! It's not difficult to see why this remained banned for ages as it doesn't depict the Soviet political ethic particularly favourably; nor does it look at the sexes, nor those of an ethnic minority, as in any way equal - and that's what helps to make it's points more potent. It's unsavoury and gritty; the characters are frequently obnoxious, malnourished, malformed and hardly the epitome of the collective glory the CCCP wanted to export to the world. It's that honesty - helped to a considerable extent by real "peasants" rather than actors; when coupled with the touchingly assertive effort from Savvina that makes this a tough, but ultimately quite rewarding, watch that does inject some humour now and again but is essentially quite a revealing and plausible look at the lives of people whose lives meant little, even to them! It's a slightly cyclical story, this - ages gone by might evolve into ages to come that might never improve whether there be a Czar or a Chairman at the helm of the state.