SYNOPSICS
Letnie przesilenie (2015) is a Polish,German,Russian movie. Michal Rogalski has directed this movie. Jonas Nay,Filip Piotrowicz,Gerdy Zint,Steffen Scheumann are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2015. Letnie przesilenie (2015) is considered one of the best Drama,War movie in India and around the world.
Poland, 1943. Four young characters are connected through a series of unusual events: ROMEK, a Polish boy from the village in which action takes place; GUIDO, a German soldier serving in the village during occupation; FRANKA, the daughter of a well-to-do local farmer; and BUNIA, a Jewish girl that escaped from a train on its way to a death camp. Each of them come across something that at the time is simultaneously a danger to and escape from their harsh reality: love. Will they be able to hold on to their dreams while facing the horrors of their day and uncertainty of future?
Letnie przesilenie (2015) Trailers
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Letnie przesilenie (2015) Reviews
almost a basket of stereotypes and not just from ww2
The movie is set in a beautiful atmosphere of the summer, the atmosphere conducive to lightness and romantic feelings, especially for late teens, even if it is war time. Though director/writer supposedly tries to take a different, polish look at what is happening, a lot of things are really strange, coming out of nowhere, maybe its magic of the summer night: why are people almost randomly shot (either by Russians or by Germans, even Nazis seemed to exercise some restraint)? why are good proper girls having sex on the first encounter? why is there a Jewish girl from Warszaw there? (when apparently the Jewish issue was long solved), why is she demanding something? why are there Russian partisans in polish forest (especially, if its western part of Poland)? etc. etc. etc. This might had been a nice movie about German/Polish youth coming together over their love for forbidden American music and polish life at that time, but with all the other random war things thrown in, what is left? A piece that seems to be more exploitative than revealing, with familiar topics of "Russian rape" and holocaust thrown in too casually and looking too painfully wrong in this movie.
Disturbing revisionism
The movie opens in a small town of Southeastern Poland in 1943, under German occupation. The German soldiers apparently live in bucolic harmony with the locals and are depicted as rather nice fellows; in their first scene they devoutly thank the Lord for the meal they are about to receive. Some are bumbling, cute incompetents in the mold of the TV Nazis in Hogan's Heroes. There are no Jews around, of course; this is explained away as follows: they were taken care of by the Einsatzgruppen (the SS death squads). This implicitly perpetuates the canard that only the SS death squads, not the Wehrmacht itself were responsible for atrocities against civilians in Poland and other Eastern European countries. This myth was exploded in many sources, among them the documentary The Unknown Soldier (2006) by Michael Verhoeven. Partisans are depicted as murderous psychopathic interlopers and such nagging questions as summary execution of civilians for partisan actions (or for any other reason) are glossed over or attributed to a single Nazi officer straight out of Hollywood Central Casting, Department Bad Nazis. In one of the first scenes a Pole voices his approval of the murder of Jews. Yes, there were many antisemitic Poles, but there were also many that protected, assisted and in many cases saved fugitive Jews. And, at any rate, Polish Jews were murdered by Germans, not by Poles. Auschwitz was planned, staffed and run by Germans. There have been German movies where Nazi crimes during WWII are discreetly swept under the rug. At least, there is an element of self-interest here. However, it is disturbing to see this in a Polish movie, since six million Poles died in a war that began with the totally unprovoked invasion of Poland by Germany. Its even more disturbing (but a lot more understandable) if one takes into account that this is a Polish - German coproduction.
Hm.
"Letnie przesilenie" tells the story of several young persons, who meet in Poland at wartime and whose lives will forever be affected by this grave war. It shows how different cultures meet, how politics tear apart relationships, childhoods and adolescence. The movie is one in a row of many titles that more or less share a common topic. Of course each and every story is an individual one and thus worth being told, however, in terms of filmmaking there is not much that seperates this film from the others and makes it seem special. The production and acting is solid, the movie looks worthy and is by any standard qualified for the big screen. But it seems a bit out of time to make it seem like only the high-ranked officials were cruel under the NS-regime and to portray German soldiers as sensitive individuals who are just desperate and affraid. A little less stereotypes and calculated personal struggles would have benefited the plot. All in all this is worth a watch, even though it is not an outstanding work. Many people will like it and I didn't even get the ending totally, so I shouldn't be the one to prevent you from giving it a try.
Particularly recommended for those outside Poland who cannot conceive of how it was
Potentially and ostensibly wistful, romantic and attractive-looking, Michal Rogalski's "Letnie przesilenie" (meaning "Summer Solstice") is actually a tough enough watch, if one perhaps offering little that is new to Polish filmgoers, unlike those elsewhere in the world who will (should) hopefully be enlightened a bit more as to how wartime Poland looked and lived and operated, while also acquainting themselves with the complex and frank narrative style and attention to detail so typical of the traditional Polish film-making. Now there is no question that rural Poland during the War was a little different from the cities. Here we have summer 1943 presented (significantly, since this is just after the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising but before the main Warsaw Uprising of late summer and early autumn 1944). Nevertheless, the then city life in Poland - with routine presence of Gestapo and SS, and hence endless seizures of ordinary Poles and more or less randomised executions of tens of them per week on the streets - gave every reason for overriding hatred of Germans among Poles. This is of course to say nothing of the yet-worse things happening in the Jewish Ghettos enforced by the Occupant in all main cities. In contrast, German forces in the countryside - where the pace of life was obviously a bit slower - were billeted rather than in barracks, and (I have it on good authority that) it was just unrealistic for Germans and Poles in such close proximity to say nothing to one another or interact in no way at all for 4 years! All the more so as not every German in uniform was a raging Nazi. Indeed, many were basically farm-boys themselves. Hence, in this film, the Polish woman who comes in to cook for the Occupants does indeed help the very young German soldier Guido (Jonas Ney) to wipe some food off his uniform, while her younger assistant Franka (played by Urszula Bogucka) can't help but fancy him a little, even as - understandably enough - an interest is also being shown in her by young Polish railway worker Romek (Filip Piotrowicz) - whose ascent into a more assertive adulthood is also a topic of the film. And the three younger people here - on two opposing sides and of two sexes - share an interest in modern jazz and swing music that is in fact the reason for Guido to be in uniform in the first place (he was punished by enlistment for listening to stuff the Nazis classed as "decadent"). Nevertheless, random killings are possible even here, and are in fact participated in by both Germans and Russians. While the Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact allowing the two empires to carve up Poland and murder millions of Poles was history by 1943, we are led to believe that partisan Russians were still active in Poland, and might (true to the established tradition) kill resident Poles just as soon as invading Germans. Uniting all sides here is advantage-taking in regard to the mysterious trains that keep passing through the rural area - in fact transports of Jewish people to camps. Pieces of clothing and other items occasionally drop on to the line, and the Germans use these cynically and more-knowingly, while the Poles do so more out of pressing need - yet they still do so. Occasionally, a person manages to escape from a train, and that brings us to the haunting portrayal of a desperate escapee called Bunia (played by Maria Semotiuk). She is helped by - and willing to fraternise with - Romek, but is ultimately taken (sadly and typically in every sense of that word) by the Russians, with whom she opts to throw in her lot (she has little choice in the matter, naturally, but clearly sees time spent with such captors as slightly preferable to the alternative of near-certain recapture by the Germans and an awful death). Ultimately, the brief music-sharing idyll put in place between the male and female Polish leads and the young German goes pear-shaped, and Guido is foolish enough to plead with his unpleasant officer (well-played by Steffen Scheumann) by offering to carry out any order he is given. Typically - and authentically enough - the Oberleutnant chooses to re-establish his authority over the insubordinate Guido by insisting that he shoots the lovely young Polish girl Franka he has been kissing so very few minutes before. It's an appropriate and all-too-realistic end of any possible touch of innocence between enemies that the Polish countryside might conceivably have allowed for, in a film that - rightly enough - represents the fruits of 21st-century Polish-German cooperation. It's sad (also rightly enough), a bit through-provoking, and indeed made in line with many of the great traditions of more-profound Polish film-making. And it ought to be watched by far more people in the West than are ever likely to actually see it.