aka Eternal Winter
- Gulag: Forgotten Prisoners of WWII review by PA
I could not find this title on IMDb so I searched the director and found the films title is Eternal Winter. And this is the films title in its home country of Hungary (Iarna Eterna). I don't know how it became know as Gulag: Forgotten Prisoners of WWII.
3 out of 3 members found this review helpful.
Opening up a little known chapter of our history
- Gulag: Forgotten Prisoners of WWII review by TE
A harrowing account of the degradation and oppression suffered by Hungarian prisoners, mainly women, in Russian gulags in the later stages of WW2. This shocking treatment continued for many years after the War had ended, a situation that the Allies colluded in.
A one-star review on here accuses the film makers of not portraying the horrors in sufficient detail. Personally I cannot understand how such comments can be made, the suffering is very clearly delineated.
What the film also shows is the extent to which certain individuals are able to harden themselves and do whatever it takes to survive. The morally compromised choices that this involves are the true subject of the film.
1 out of 1 members found this review helpful.
Long, drawn out, and utterly unconvincing
- Gulag: Forgotten Prisoners of WWII review by JF
Having received many accolades and depicting what should have been a fascinating survival story of one of many almost forgotten terrors in WW11, I looked forward to viewing this. I was expecting a film on par with "The way back" or a technically improved "Gulag" of 1985. Just so disappointed. Given all the great books depict how harsh life in any Gulags could be, the severity of the weather, the lack of food, clothing and other resources, the infamous pitilessness of the guards - this portrayal was simply not credible. Yes, Gulag was in a isolated spot, and the clothing was not new but they all looked pretty healthy - even those being left to die "int transition". The inconsistencies of apparent isolation yet access to certain products, the "kind" (in relative terms) actions of guards, the lack of brutality or regular death, the unconvincing emotion between the two main characters. People died from exhaustion, disease, hunger, abuse and brutality in these places - yet none of this really came across. It was a poor, superficial portrayal of a desperately inhumane situation, conveying little of the depth of suffering those sent there endured. The film dragged from one interminable scene to another, regularly passing back and forth from close ups of the two main characters "connecting" with their eyes. I watched until the end out of sheer determination. If you are interested in this as a subject - read one of the many well written books or watch other, far better, films that can really capture the horrors, humanity and your own emotions.
1 out of 3 members found this review helpful.
Moving account of one survivor's story
- Gulag: Forgotten Prisoners of WWII review by Peter B
The story of the gulags beggars belief. Set up as a tool of political oppression after the russian revolution of 1917, the system was much increased when Stalin came to power. 18 million people were sent to the Gulag from 1930 to 1953, of which roughly 1.5 to 1.7 million died. Political opponents, pro-democracy advocates, prisoners of war, criminals, the middle-class of countries occupied by Russia as the Nazis retreated in WWII all were worked or starved to death in freezing conditions. I found the film rewarding and it stimulated me to find out more about the Gulags. As a family doctor I had a polish patient who had survived time in the Gulag and her friend wrote a riveting account of their time there. As in concentration camps, those who survived often had moral lines to cross.
0 out of 0 members found this review helpful.
Excellent Hungarian Movie about Slave Labour of Hungarians in USSR camps in 1940s/50s
- Gulag: Forgotten Prisoners of WWII review by PV
This is a great film - a fascinating Second World War and its aftermath story I knew nothing about. I knew German soldiers taken prisoner by the Soviets were sent to camps, often until 1953 ( when Stalin died) and even 1855/6. 95% of those prisoners died - starvation, disease, murdered by Russians.
I also knew Hungary as well as Romania were Nazi allies - sent to try and reach trapped German soldiers at Stalingrad. Hungary had an Arrow Cross fascist party in power 1944-5. The USSR took its revenge., At the end the stats are stated - 700,000 Hungarians sent to slave labour camps in USSR; Only 400,000 returned after years of slaving in the camps in mines etc. I assume most slaves taken were men - but here the focus is on women.
A decent film. Watch with WALKING WITH THE ENEMY movies to learn more about Hungary in WWII and after. The Music Box (1989) is about a Hungarian war criminal who escaped to the USA> The Fifth Seal and older Hungarian film about the time.
I am not sure if this is all fiction or if the woman featured was real. Her decision at the end left me shocked (NO SPOILERS) and I thought it so unfair on her lover... That fo me changed how I saw her - no longer was she really just a victim. Her lover was a victim - of her!
Anyway, 4 stars for a decent film.
0 out of 0 members found this review helpful.