Why does everyone instantly call this propaganda?
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Teremov — 12 years ago(March 31, 2014 07:51 AM)
Your explanation is stupid and have no relation to the film. Belarus wasn't part of Europe - it was part of the USSR occupied by Nazis during the WWII. It has nothing to do with "poor Poles" or whatever. The film is based on interviews and documented events. And the director himself was never part of war or any other kind of propaganda - you must've confused him with Steven Spielberg. If anything, Come & See is an anti-war propaganda.
It's really confusing to see so many kids today accusing Soviet films of "anti-German propaganda". It's like a new thought was put into people's minds. Careful with that. -
Teremov — 11 years ago(September 18, 2014 08:36 AM)
I was answering the guy who implied that communists invaded European countries (countries outside of the USSR), and thus this film should be seen as propaganda. As I said, Belarus used to be part of Russia for ages. It is a Russian piece of history. Around 21 millions of Russians and Belorussians died during WWII. Poles or other offended nations have nothing to do with this film, simple as that.
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RoboKynotKy — 10 years ago(April 07, 2015 02:44 PM)
Propaganda my balls, nobody says anything positive about Stalin, and the comunist flag doesn't appears a single time.
Meanwhile American Sniper and it's ultra fake baby show the american flag f@+ing everywhere, and nobody considers it propaganda either (because it certainly is not). -
franzkabuki — 10 years ago(April 07, 2015 08:17 PM)
Not only is the red flag missing, but even the glorious Red Army fails to show up to perform heroics. And Russians hardly needed reminding that Nazis were a bunch of evil bastards. Far as propaganda goes, Idi I Smotri is exonerated of any guilt.
"facts are stupid things" - Ronald Reagan -
femmefatale3000 — 10 years ago(July 19, 2015 04:24 PM)
Anyone who says that is utterly clueless about the history and cast of this film.
It took Elem Klimov seven years to get approval to make this movie, and during that time he had a nervous breakdown and his wife died in a car crash.
As a child Klimov witnessed the evacuation and battle of Stalingrad, which is often regarded as the single largest and bloodiest battle in the history of warfare.
The village elder was played by an actual Belorussian survivor who hid on the same island they did in the movie as a teen. In fact many of the older extras in the movie were WW2 survivors from Belarus.
The actor who played the Nazi with the pet Loris was a member of the SS during the war as a teenager.
The screenwriter was a partisan in Belarus as a teenager, and based the screenplay off of the accounts of survivors. He wanted to wanted to make this movie " As evidence of war, and as a plea for peace."