Come and See Comments

  • Clemmie 2022-04-24 07:01:14

    The Soviet director Ilem Klimov brought the massacre in which the Germans burned hundreds of people alive during World War II on the screen. The long shots that follow will better substitute the audience into the turbulent atmosphere of war. Flesh and blood are not enough to describe the cruelty of war. It is the killing of unarmed innocents that makes people terrified. In a war that has lost legal checks and balances and moral constraints, how much humanity is there? Ugly, see for...

  • Gerardo 2022-04-24 07:01:14

    The most terrifying war movie I've ever seen (only next to "Apocalypse Now"), my brain is now lost in the direction of life like a pack of spicy sticks from 1983 that have been soaked in Laoshan white flower snake grass...

  • Krystina 2022-04-24 07:01:14

    4.5. The first half is too powerful, the depressing soundtrack runs through every shot, and a large number of subjective shots and frontal close-ups maximize the participation of the audience. The second half is slightly less expressive, and can only rely on the accumulation of suffering and massacre to create shock, brutal but not enough to suppress...

  • Juana 2022-04-24 07:01:14

    cruel piece. . . . And I feel that the last shot of the protagonist's little boy with white lips and eyes is very similar to my high school Chinese teacher in his forties. . . This is probably the cruelty of war. ....

  • Mervin 2022-04-24 07:01:14

    4:3 Epic sense of Belarusian enemy-occupied guerrillas, forests, rural fields, fog, mysticism, long-shot war trauma, suffering, anti-type (anti-hero) massacre The boy's old face looks like Hitler in the...

  • Rosario 2022-04-24 07:01:14

    The two evil regimes are fighting each other at the bottom of the game, and no one should try to occupy the moral high ground. The humanitarian crimes committed by the Soviet Union in Germany itself and other neighboring countries in Eastern Europe are equally innumerable. The interaction between the boy and the girl in the first paragraph is too lengthy, and it does not add much to the theme of the film. The interweaving of realism and psychedelia to set off the atmosphere is remarkable, but...

  • Kristian 2022-04-24 07:01:14

    How shocking it would be to see this film on the big screen, many of the action scenes in the film remind me of "Andrei Rublev", but more than "Ivan's Childhood" A lot of realistic feeling, the ending of the movie is one of the best endings I have seen, and the back of the resistance army in the forest is very...

  • Daniela 2022-04-23 07:02:35

    The close-up of a large number of direct-looking shots forced the audience to stare at Flor, and then introduced a long-hand-held follow-up shot and a subjective perspective with his repeated dizziness in the war, so that the audience would occupy Flor’s out-of-body body and enter the village. Shake presents the atrocities like a documentary, and the audience is like a wandering soul. The three viewpoints complement each other, and the audience can "see it for themselves". Naturalistic lighting...

  • Anais 2022-04-23 07:02:35

    Only by letting the audience break free from the euphoric state of watching movies and using the most brutal, depressing, and terrifying images and sounds to make the audience intuitively see violence and death, can the ideological function inherent in war films be eliminated. The most moral war movie since...

  • Wyatt 2022-04-23 07:02:35

    A rare two-hour viewing experience, with excellent sound and photography. The stroke of magic is the ending where the boy shoots Hitler, and here I again encounter the really difficult and meaningful question that the film raises with its imagination: if everything could be reversed, erased, undone, and the origin was innocent in the arms of a mother Baby Adolf, will you kill this child or not? And the whole movie seems to be responding to Adorno unconsciously, especially when you want to...

Extended Reading

Come and See quotes

  • Flyora Gaishun: To love... to have children...

  • Man in village: You're a Hopeless optimist.

    Man#2 in village: He should be cured of that.