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Thessaloniki 2003 - The FIPRESCI PrizeAlexei German Jr.'s The Last Train
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Dr. Paul Fistchbach (Pavel Romanov) is an unlikely hero in this frozen inferno. A rotund, bespectacled German surgeon drafted late in the war, he’s not unlike Tolstoy’s Pierre in a latterday “War and Peace.” Arriving on the train of the title at an outpost bracing for a Soviet advance, he’s driven by a continually coughing soldier through a snowstorm to the hospital to which he has been assigned. From the car window can be seen the pockets of freezing misery and occasional military hardware that is all that is left of the once mighty Nazi war machine.
The doctor arrives at the hospital to find that all the patients except for hideously burned soldier have been evacuated, and only a few staff members remain. When the officer in charge (in between the inevitable coughing fits) threatens to kill Fistchbach if he doesn’t flee, the doctor stumbles into the fog-shrouded, icy wastes where he befriends another straggler, a former postman with a fatalistic sense of humor, and the two wander through a featureless landscape punctuated by sudden atrocities.
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Alexei German Jr. |
Far from celebrating patriotism or battlefield valor, “The Last Train” poignantly underscores the absurdity of war and the value of simple human decency. Fitschbach and the postman exchange rueful, black comic observations and painful personal memories in between their coughing fits and nightmarish encounters with the disasters of war. Some of these incidents are almost funny. A Russian family holed up in a farmhouse “capture” Fitschbach and the postman with a pistol that proves to be unloaded. Other incidents, however, are among the most painful war scenes in cinema.
Although the 26-year-old German, son of the famed Russian director of the same name, indulges in the kind of excess (the coughing, for example) common to first time directors, his film compares with such similarly themed masterpieces as “Fires on the Plain,” “Kanal,” and “Come and See.” The epilogue alone, eloquently underlining the profundity and pointlessness of an anonymous act of kindness, elevates it to ranks of the finest films in the genre.
| recent festivals |
Thessaloniki 2003 The Last Train
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