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COLLECTION · Movie · 2007

Katyn

Katyń

On September 1st, 1939, Nazi Germany invades Poland, unleashing World War II. On September 17th, the Soviet Red Army crosses the border. The Polish army, unable to fight on two fronts, is defeated. Thousands of Polish men, both military and government officials, are captured by the invaders. Their fate will only be known several years later.

Source: TMDB
* 6.7 (282)DramaHistoryWarPoland
Soundtrack
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Directors
Andrzej Wajda
Countries
Poland
Studios
Akson Studio · Telekomunikacja Polska · Telewizja Polska
Runtime
122 min
Release
21/09/2007
Score
6.7 / 10 (282)

Awards and nominations

  • Nominated at Academy Awards — Best Foreign Language Film
  • Winner at Academy Awards — Eagle Award for Best Film
  • Winner at Academy Awards — Paweł Edelman
  • Winner at Academy Awards — Magdalena Dipont
  • Winner at Academy Awards — Eagle Award for Best Costumes
  • Winner at Academy Awards — Krzysztof Penderecki
  • Nominated at Academy Awards — Jacek Hamela
  • Winner at Academy Awards — Danuta Stenka
  • Nominated at Academy Awards — Andrzej Wajda
  • Nominated at Academy Awards — Eagle Award for Best Editing
  • Nominated at Academy Awards — Andrzej Chyra
  • Nominated at Academy Awards — Artur Żmijewski
Where to watch
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Cast
Andrzej Chyra
Andrzej Chyra
Jerzy
Maja Ostaszewska
Maja Ostaszewska
Anna
Artur Żmijewski
Artur Żmijewski
Andrzej
Danuta Stenka
Danuta Stenka
General's Wife
Jan Englert
Jan Englert
General
Magdalena Cielecka
Magdalena Cielecka
Agnieszka
Agnieszka Glińska
Agnieszka Glińska
School Director
Paweł Małaszyński
Paweł Małaszyński
Pilot Lieutenant
Maja Komorowska
Maja Komorowska
Professor's Wife
?
Władysław Kowalski
Professor U. J.
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Carregando
User reviews
CinemaSerf
★ 7.0 / 10
I'm not sure I've ever seen a war film wherein the Nazis and the Soviets actually tried to hold the other accountable for some of the atrocities in Poland, so this film serves as quite an eye-opener. It's September 1939 and the ordinary Polish citizenry didn't know where to turn. Their cities are being bombed to smithereens and what's left of their armed forces is being easily overwhelmed by their invaders. Initially, it is only the officers who are being detained, with the private soldiers and the families being left largely to their own devices. Gradually, though, it becomes clear that this is but an holding operation whilst the prison trains were readied to convey these men to prison camps in the East. "Anna" (Maja Ostaszewska) finds herself in such a predicament when she, and their daughter "Nika", become separated from her husband "Capt. Andrzej" (Artur Zmijewski). At this stage in the conflict, it might have been possible for her to move to the zone occupied by the German military where he parents lived in Krakow, but after being refused a licence three times she becomes more acutely aware of the dangers as she has to rely on a kindly Russian officer to make it to what she hopes will be somewhere marginally safer. In 1943, with the Nazis now dominant in this theatre of the war, they discover mass graves at Katyn which they blame of the now withdrawn Russian forces. Exhuming what is left of the bodies, they carry out "thorough" autopsies and identify many of the murdered men via loudspeakers to their loved ones living in dread that their husbands, fathers and sons would be named. By 1945, the battle had swung the other way and it'd become the task of the Soviet forces to reveal the true extent of the extermination of some 22,000 Polish officers, but with each side having consistently accused the other for the killings, it proves nigh on impossible to know just who was behind these crimes. What are the chances that this family will ever meet again? This is very clearly a topic close to the heart of Andrzej Wajda and by interweaving a poignant familial story with some truly ghastly archive footage of some of the real discoveries at Katyn, it begins to quite scientifically establish just which of these militaristic regimes was behind not only these executions but of just what happened to anyone on their own side who protested or attempted to disobey. It also illustrates something of the psychological trauma faced by both those imprisoned and those awaiting news; the senses of fear and dejection - and all amidst a convincingly presented production that captures the imagery of war and it's concomitant poverty and horror potently. It's a grim watch, made more so by a total absence of hope throughout and it is quite a compelling critique of mankind's ability to be cruel, truly cruel.
TMDB
Keywords
based on novel or bookworld war iikraków, polandbased on true storywar propagandahistorical eventstalinismstate security1940sstate crimes
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