In the 1970s, Grigorescu's practice was driven by resistance to a particular moment of political oppression in Romania, which saw the rise of the cult of the leader and of an increasingly powerful police state. In the film, the artist plays two opposing roles, appearing alternatively as Romanian president Nicolae Ceaușescu—wearing a mask of the leader's face—and as a common citizen who wants to ask Ceaușescu questions and confront him about the decline of the people’s welfare. Grigorescu performed in the intimacy of his own apartment, under the scrutiny of the camera lens, enacting the trauma of political reality in communist society.
 
        Historical docudrama, which describes accurately - based on evidence, documents, reconstructions and archive footage - the last days of life spouses Nicolae and Elena Ceausescu. Main performers, Victoria Cocias (Elena Ceausescu) and Constantin Cojocaru (Nicolae Ceausescu).
 
        The film explores the image of the Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausescu using unknown official footage from the Romanian National Television and National Film Archives.
 
        The story about the national personality cult of the Romanian dictator, Nicolae Ceausescu.
 
        This documentary uses news footage and amateur video to paint a vivid picture of Romania's 1989 revolution and the fall of dictator Nicolae Ceausescu.
 
         
        