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COME
AND SEE
DVD.
Artificial Eye.
Twenty
five years after its initial release, Elem Klimov’s Come
and See (1985) remains one of the most affecting war
films ever made. Set in 1943, it tells the story of Florya, a
young boy who joins a band of partisans to battle the German forces
driving East into the Soviet Union. Having being left behind in
the forest, Florya narrowly survives an aerial bombing, which
leaves him suffering from tinnitus. When Florya returns home to
his village, he finds the cottage in which his mother and two
sisters live eerily empty...
Along with Tarkovsky, Alexei Gherman and Larisa Shepitko (the
director's wife), Klimov was one of the brightest stars in Russian
cinema during the 60s and 70s. Beginning his career with comedies,
Klimov fell foul of the censors with his second film, Adventures
of a Dentist (1965). Agony (1981), his
film about Rasputin, although completed in 1975 spent ten years
sitting on the shelf. In 1979, Klimov experienced a personal tragedy
when Sheptiko was killed in a car crash while shooting a film
based on Valentin Rasputin’s novel Farewell Matyora.
Like Shepitko’s The Ascent, Come
and See was based on a largely autobiographical novella,
The Khatyn Story (Khatyn, a Belarusian
village, is not to be confused with the Katyn´ forest in
Russia, the forest where Polish officers were executed by Russian
soldiers, and the subject of a recent film by Andrzej Wajda, Katyn
[2007], and of which newsreel footage features in Makavejev’s
Sweet Movie, [1974]) written by a Belarusian
World War Two veteran, Ales Adamovich. Adamovich and Vasil Bykau
(author of Sotnikov, the story upon
which The Ascent is based, available in English
translation as The Ordeal), are arguably
the two greatest Belarusian writers of the post-war period. Together
they founded the Belarusian PEN Centre, and opposed Alexander
Lukashenka, Belarus’s autocratic president, who has been
in power since 1994. However, Adamovich is perhaps most famous
for drawing attention to the sheer extent of the horror of the
Chernobyl disaster during the late eighties. In both The
Khatyn Story and his screenplay for Come
and See Adamovich recounts in graphic detail the manner
in which the SS and their collaborators razed over six hundred
Belarusian villages during the Second World War. Whereas The
Ascent was produced by Mosfilm, Come and See
was a co-production between Mosfilm and Belarusfilm, the studios
of the Belarusian capital, Minsk. Because of its association with
War films, Belarusfilm is often referred to as ‘Partisanfilm’.
Although directed by a Russian, Come and See
is, therefore, very much a Belarusian affair...
What
makes Come and See so affecting is not so much
the graphicness, but the almost surrealistic manner in which Klimov
films the atrocities. There is not so much a plot, but rather
a series of episodes which Florya stumbles through, all of which
are punctuated with his haunting, catatonic stares into camera.
The more Florya endures, the more he ages, and by the end of the
film his hair is grey and his brow wrinkled. There is a genuinely
deranged moment in which partisans, having just suffered at the
hands of the Germans, construct an Hitler effigy out of mud, which
they then cover in spit.
Klimov films much of the action in long, Steadicam assisted takes,
and adopts a startling, subjective approach to sound, reproducing
tinnitus, ominous buzzing flies, snatches of Strauss amid the
gun fire and cries. The film climaxes with Florya exploding into
a violent rage, but Klimov has the audacity to end with a startlingly
pessimistic conclusion, in which he likens Florya’s rage
to that of his own Nazi persecutors, via a brilliant piece of
intellectual montage that harkens back to the glory days of Eisenstein
and October (1928).
One filmmaker clearly impressed by Come and See
was Steven Spielberg, who gleaned stylistic elements from the
film for both Schindler’s List (1993) and
Saving Private Ryan (1998). However, Come
and See has also exerted a strong influence is on recent
British horror, with directors such as Christopher Smith (Severance,
2006) and Ben Wheatley (Kill List, 2011) citing
Klimov’s film as in inspiration.
Both exhilarating and exhausting, Come and See
is not just a great war film, but a great piece of cinema per
se. For a film that was originally entitled ‘Kill Hitler’,
it now makes a curious, albeit sobering contrast to Tarantino’s
Inglorious Basterds (2009)...
DANIEL
BIRD
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