Why didn't Yuri Zhivago leave Russia with Lara and Victor?

Why didn't Yuri Zhivago leave Russia with Lara and Victor? - Man and Woman Standing on Brown Wooden Dock

Near the end of Doctor Zhivago (1965), after "Strelnikov" dies, Victor again offers to help Yuri and Lara escape Russia. Since the threat to Lara was much more immediate than the first time he made that offer, Yuri and Lara eventually agreed that Lara should leave.

But if Yuri was willing to entrust Victor with the safety of Lara and Lara's existing daughter, and Yuri and Lara's unborn child and the balalaika that was Yuri's only heirloom of his mother, why didn't Yuri go with them?

Throughout the movie Yuri's main goal seems to be to living a normal life with the people he loves in spite of the war, and at this point in the movie Lara's the only one he has left since Tonya, Sasha and Alexander have already fled the country. He didn't appear to be hell bent on tending to the war's wounded or writing banned poetry or anything like that which would require staying behind (that's what he did after choosing to stay, but it sure didn't feel like the reason he stayed). He doesn't seem to be particularly consumed with anger for what Victor did at the beginning of the movie, and has exactly the same reasons to hate him that Lara has. And traveling with Lara wouldn't put her in any more danger than she was in already (as Victor said, Yuri was "small fry" compared to her). So why didn't he take the chance to at least try and start a normal life with Lara outside of Russia where they might all be safe?

I know nothing about the original novel, so perhaps this is better explained there.



Best Answer

Zhivago writes his poetry throughout his life but we don't see it all the time as it would stop the progress of the film. There are hints to this. His brother seeks him out having read a book of his poetry. Tonya refers to his writing when they are in exile etc. Why he stays is more difficult - he writes about Russia really, through his poetry he challenges the communist regime which puts him in danger but it is more than his duty he does in staying. It's like he has no other choice. Russia supplies him with the raw material for his work and to leave it would be to abandon his work? Sonething like that. I think you have to have your own theory on this since it is so complex. For me it is about him being an artist which is rooted in his identity of being a russian.




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Why did Yuri Zhivago not go with Lara?

He doesn't seem to be particularly consumed with anger for what Victor did at the beginning of the movie, and has exactly the same reasons to hate him that Lara has. And traveling with Lara wouldn't put her in any more danger than she was in already (as Victor said, Yuri was "small fry" compared to her).

Why did Dr. Zhivago let Lara go?

He wants to stay in Varykino, but his reasons are unclear. Firstly, he does not want to escape to another country, out of either loyalty to Russia or a feeling of duty. Perhaps he feels that, having lost Tonya, he must now let Lara go.

Is Lara raped in Dr. Zhivago?

Komarovsky rapes Lara at one point, and she follows him to the restaurant at which he is dining and shoots him in front of the crowd that is celebrating Zhivago and Tonya's engagement.

Did Dr. Zhivago and Lara have a child?

Lara is married to Pasha, a young soldier who is missing, and she has come west to find him. She has a daughter, Katya, whom she has left in Yuryatin, her birthplace in the Urals.



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