Geh und sieh (1985)

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Geh und sieh: Directed by Elem Klimov. With Aleksey Kravchenko, Olga Mironova, Liubomiras Laucevicius, Vladas Bagdonas. After finding an old rifle, a young boy joins the Soviet resistance movement against ruthless German forces and experiences the horrors of World War II.

“I have a bad habit of reading too many reviews and comments about a film before Iu0026#39;ve seen it, mainly to get an idea about whether itu0026#39;s going to be worth a couple of hours of my time watching it. As a result, I am often slightly disappointed with much of what I see, as all the hype that Iu0026#39;ve read about a film kind of blows my expectations out of all proportion. I had a feeling this would be the case with Elem Klimovu0026#39;s u0026#39;Come and Seeu0026#39;, a film Iu0026#39;d read a lot about, particularly here on the IMDb. (Imagine my u0026quot;excitementu0026quot; when, having tried to see the film for nearly a year, I discovered it was to be released on DVD a week or two ago from today!) Well, I finally watched the film yesterday and… well, nothing could have prepared me for the sheer intensity and unflinching visceral horror of the atrocities that u0026#39;Come and Seeu0026#39; invites us to… come and see. (Has anyone commented before on what a clever title that actually is…?) This is one of those films, like, say, u0026#39;Requiem For A Dreamu0026#39; or u0026#39;The Magdalene Sistersu0026#39; (both of which, though great films, are simply not in the same league as Klimovu0026#39;s film), that one does not (obviously) so much enjoy as submit oneself to. By the end of such films we are left numbed and shell-shocked, wondering what we are supposed to do with the intense emotions that have been evoked within us. Yes, I felt like the ground had been pulled from beneath me; yes, what I saw in that film made my blood boil, my head hurt and my heart pound; and, yes, it showed me things Iu0026#39;d seen before but to a degree of intensity and detail that I had not experienced before. The point though, I guess, is that the role of cinema (and art in general) is not to offer answers or tell us what to think but to simply show us particular events and characters and allow us to come to our own decisions about what those things u0026#39;meanu0026#39;. Iu0026#39;m rambling now, but Iu0026#39;ll simply end by saying that u0026#39;Come and Seeu0026#39; is, with its outstanding technical and artistic credentials aside, a film whose very title alone demands that it be seen. It is the work of a visionary, a cry of despair from the depths of hell, and an important reminder of humanityu0026#39;s capacity for inhumanity Go and see…”

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