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A crowning achievement of 1980's Soviet cinema, Elem Klimov's Come And See
is perhaps the ultimate WW II film. This savage and lyrical fever dream of
death, rage and terror experienced through young eyes is a virtual primer
for the subsequent, similarly psychedelic intensity of Terrence Malick's The Thin Red Line and Spielberg's Saving Private Ryan. Klimov's elegant,
harrowing union of unflinching ferocity and dreamlike clarity moved Empire Of The Sun author J. G. Ballard to declare Come And See the greatest war
film ever made. Time Out New York agreed, saying "Come And See's nimble
balance of the sordid with the elegiac makes Peckinpah's Cross Of Iron seem
like Newsies."
When young Florya willingly joins a group of Partisans fighting the Nazis in
Byelorussia, U.S.S.R., he little suspects that he is plunging through the
looking glass. Separated from his comrades during a paratroop attack and
struck deaf by German artillery, Florya - in the company of Glascha, a
beguiling peasant girl - wanders a battle-scorched Russian purgatory of
prehistoric forests and man-made slaughter. Florya's journey takes him and
us through a gallery of exquisitely poetic imagery and brutal human
atrocity.
Unlike traditional war films, Come And See never stoops to convenient heroic
catharsis or genre movie narrative symmetry. Images of a beautiful girl's
impromptu dance in the rain and an SS unit's spontaneous,
self-congratulatory applause at their own butchery haunt with equal power.
More than any other war film, Come And See unites the powerful truths and inescapable dilemmas that lurk behind both the raptures of youth and the
horrors of war.
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