Winter in Wartime
This beautifully shot period film follows 13 year old Michiel, a small town boy in
Nazi-occupied Holland in the Winter of 1945.
Michiel’s childhood innocence and restless desire for adventure lead him
into increasingly dark and morally ambiguous territories when the realities of
war, resistance and adulthood collide
and converge upon his small town life. He is apprehensive about his father’s uneasy
cooperation with their German occupiers and looks up to his uncle Ben, a
resistance fighter whose connections, gifts and attitude intrigue Michiel. When
an allied fighter pilot crashes near the village, Michiel and his sister, a
young nurse, are drawn into the search for the pilot and must debate whether to
take action or remain silent, and question who they can truly trust. The film,
while somewhat conventional in some of its WWII era plotlines, offers enough
twists and intrigue to keep the viewer’s attention, but its real appeal is
grounded heavily in the films setting. The scenes are filmed beautifully and
the village, woods, snow, bicycles, knitwear and natural light combine to give
the film an enchanting sense of place, and ground the viewer in Michiel’s
conflicted world, caught between action and fear, occupation and resistance and
childhood innocence and the risks of adult responsibilities. This film is one
of several Forbes films now added in Blu-Ray and DVD (both discs are included
in one case, so patrons will not mistakenly get home and find the film
unplayable), and the Blu-Ray is especially recommended for its crisp picture,
which captures the film’s setting wonderfully.
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