Another catastrophic Polish film, inheriting the usual heart-wrenching narrative style. If there is any difference, it is probably an intuitive and true presentation of the massacre, which is undoubtedly an R-rated film. Another Katyn massacre, which was also a tragedy for Poland, was a slaughter between countries, destroying the elites of Poland. The Warren massacre was the indiscriminate extermination of nations. Coupled with the catalysis of religion, the neighbors and villagers who lived in harmony overnight raised the sickle and axe in their hands, and did everything possible. A very funny scene in the play turned out to be Zosia and her son mixed with the retreating German army, only to escape the threat of death of Ukrainian villagers along the way. The story doesn't have a happy ending. Zosia has been on the run. Some people say that she and her son were killed by a wolf, but I didn't see this plot. No doubt she was rescued into a carriage and passed over the small German-guarded wooden bridge from which she had fled with her son. But in her illusory consciousness, the hero who saved her is her deceased boyfriend, and the three of them are reunited and will return to their homeland to start a new life.
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