In principle, not bad, like everything written and filmed about the Great War. There are some things that make a sarcastic smile, that’s true. Like the piety of one of the young soldiers, Lomonosov, it seems. The old man gave him his cross. All right, let's say. However, the image of the politician in the film is, of course, a separate
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In principle, not bad, like everything written and filmed about the Great War. There are some things that make a sarcastic smile, that’s true. Like the piety of one of the young soldiers, Lomonosov, it seems. The old man gave him his cross. All right, let's say. However, the image of the politician in the film is, of course, a separate topic. Apparently, the screenwriter does not like communists, if he forces the commissar before his death to first hysterically and, most importantly, excessively graphically shout: “I am dying for my Motherland”, and then read the words of prayer. What will the viewer remember in the end? That there really was such a Morozian people? Maybe, yes. But for some reason it seems to me that the whole film is sharpened to one phrase embedded in the mouth of the main character: "... I am fighting for Russia, not for Stalin and the Communists." A new all-Russian extra-class patriotism. Well, well. .
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