Where did the cute girl from the beginning go?
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aliza_tvito — 13 years ago(October 10, 2012 11:34 AM)
- Ireland is boring? Why so? I can't believe it. We here have a completely different idea.
- Ukrainian is different as well. The language very melodious and beautiful.
- Well, Belarus isn't Italy or France, but it has a very rich cultural heritage. Historically, it was part of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (check Wikipedia), also Tatars left some signs of their influence, in a positive meaning. The scenery is beautiful, like any place at this Earth.
Listen to your enemy, for God is talking
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emmaclarke781 — 13 years ago(October 11, 2012 04:04 AM)
1.Well, its nothing special.No offense meant to Irish people but to me, your Country is just where you happen to live. I've never gotten this
die for your Countryrubbish.
2.Is the Ukrainian language Different from the Russian language? Or are they mutually intelligible? I didn't understand when you said that Ukrainian was different. Different how? Different as in, its not mutually intelligible?
Thank you:) -
aliza_tvito — 13 years ago(November 08, 2012 10:05 AM)
//your Country is just where you happen to live. I've never gotten this
die for your Countryrubbish. ///
I just happened to read our discussion from the beginning, at my leisure time, and stumbled upon this line I probably missed before. I also find the slogan "Die for your Country" illogical and meaningless. I would change it to: "Give your life defending your
people
, it's freedom and well-being, if there's no other way".
And that's relevant for what this movie is about.
Commander Kosach: "The Partisan doesn't ask: 'How many of them the Nazis?' He does ask: '
Where
are they?'"
Listen to your enemy, for God is talking -
dainko1981 — 10 years ago(October 10, 2015 06:24 PM)
- Ukranian language is different from the Russian even the entire alphabet is not the same. I wouldn't say they are mutually unintelligible, but it's definitely different. Way more different than Russian regional accents are between them (for example).
Ukranian is a little bit more melodic, and for me, as a native slavic-language speaker, it sounds more like Polish than Russian.
It's kinda difficult to explain - Ukranian sounds more like Polish but writes more like Russian.
- Ukranian language is different from the Russian even the entire alphabet is not the same. I wouldn't say they are mutually unintelligible, but it's definitely different. Way more different than Russian regional accents are between them (for example).
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dainko1981 — 10 years ago(October 10, 2015 06:29 PM)
- Ukranian language is different from the Russian even the entire alphabet is not the same. I wouldn't say they are mutually unintelligible, but it's definitely different. Way more different than Russian regional accents are between them (for example).
Ukranian is a little bit more melodic, and for me, as a native slavic-language speaker, it sounds more like Polish than Russian.
It's kinda difficult to explain - Ukranian sounds more like Polish but writes more like Russian.
- Ukranian language is different from the Russian even the entire alphabet is not the same. I wouldn't say they are mutually unintelligible, but it's definitely different. Way more different than Russian regional accents are between them (for example).
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er_lu_cuilesse — 12 years ago(July 07, 2013 08:31 AM)
The idea that the collective farms all sucked isn't really true. In fact, they were far more productive thanks to mechanization than the previous private farm system.
The major issue was the collective farms often lying about output, thus food distribution was often totally out of whack with reality.
When your farm says it has produced 10,000 tonnes of food, so the Government takes 9,000, but in reality you only produced 5,000 that means you and the rest of the collective are left with no food.
It really isn't a problem with the collective farms themselves, but the reign of terror making people scared to report bad harvests and the sycophancy so people report better work than they did to get awards, working together to make what should have been a productive system, unproductive. -
edjohn66 — 12 years ago(April 23, 2013 01:44 PM)
Wasn't she the girl that showed up at the very end, with blood on her thighs (probably from rape), and to whom the boy mutters, "I want to love" and "I want to have babies?"
Preach the Gospel always. If necessary, use words. -
benbo-3 — 10 years ago(September 26, 2015 09:13 AM)
That
was
the same girl from the beginning - the reason he says 'I want to love' and 'make babies' to her is out of a sense of irony. He also is probably shocked to see her again, can't believe his eyes, and stunned by what the Nazis did to her (bleeding from between the legs on the thighs after being taken by a group of men only means 1 thing). Notice that until he sees her, he's in shock and marvelling that he survived the massacre;
after
seeing the girl, the only person alive whom he knows from before except the partisan commander, is when he goes on a tear for revenge, and runs off to find the jerrycan of gas to burn the guys who violated her. Aside from that the actress is hot & I recognized her. The mother who got dragged away looked like her, but there could be definitely >1 blond woman who got dragged away to be brutalized. -
OldSamVimes — 10 years ago(September 27, 2015 09:54 AM)
Sometimes being left wondering is better than having everything spelled out.
The narrative followed the young boy, he never find out what happened to her so neither did we.
There are lots of people who were in my life for a little while that I don't know where they are or what happened to them, it makes the movie more true to life.