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An ambitious young journalist uncovers the horrific slaughter of twenty-two thousand Polish officers during World War II. A secret that has been kept hidden for far too many years.An ambitious young journalist uncovers the horrific slaughter of twenty-two thousand Polish officers during World War II. A secret that has been kept hidden for far too many years.An ambitious young journalist uncovers the horrific slaughter of twenty-two thousand Polish officers during World War II. A secret that has been kept hidden for far too many years.
- Awards
- 44 wins & 16 nominations
Holly Aston
- Rose Miller
- (as Holly Augustine)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAfter credits: "In 1990, Soviet President Gorbachev admitted that the Soviet Union was responsible for the murders of Polish prisoners of war at Katyn in 1940. No one was ever prosecuted. In 2012, declassified documents proved that the U.S. government suppressed information that attested to Soviet guilt. No British government has ever publicly charged the Soviet Union with responsibility for the Katyn Massacre. This film is dedicated to the 22,000 Polish prisoners of war murdered in the Katyn Massacre and to those murdered in the years that followed so that the truth would remain buried forever."
- GoofsThe editor of the Western Post has a portrait of Winston Churchill in his office. According the the Churchill Museum the portrait was painted in 1955, some eight years after the film is set.
Featured review
Breathtaking film based on facts that are well played by a nice plethora of Brit actors. An ambitious young journalist -Alex Pettyfer who produces as well- uncovers the horrific slaughter of twenty-two thousand Polish officers during World War II. He meets a Polish soldier who has survived and whose companions were killed at Katyn, but he keeps silence, being chased by military spies. The journalist lives in hopes the polish man tells the actual events, but he's obligated to accuse the Nazis of the horrible deaths. The final credits states: "In 1990, Soviet President Gorbachev admitted that the Soviet Union was responsible for the murders of Polish prisoners of war at Katyn in 1940. No one was ever prosecuted. In 2012, declassified documents proved that the U. S. government suppressed information that attested to Soviet guilt. No British government has ever publicly charged the Soviet Union with responsibility for the Katyn Massacre. This film is dedicated to the 22,000 Polish prisoners of war murdered in the Katyn Massacre and to those murdered in the years that followed so that the truth would remain buried forever."
This notable movie is a vivid portrayal about war and post-war along with a criminal intrigue in which an obstinate journalist attempts to find out real identity of an Eastern European refugee resulting in unexpected consequences. War has rarely been rendered in such an horrid, utterly grim manner, especially in its final part. Harrowing, unnerving drama which depicts the horror of war with a terrible massacre, a secret that has been kept hidden for far too many years and maintaining his possible connection to the British government's collusion in the cover up of one of Joseph Stalin's most notorious crimes. The story contains some overwhelming sequences as the massacre across the Katyn wood and including some actual documentary. Stars Alex Pettyfer who gives an acceptable acting as a young, ambitious journalist who risks love, career, and ultimately his life to uncover the surprising true by taking a notebook. He's well accompanied by a good cast, such as: Robert Wieckiewicz, Talulah Riley and special mention for the veteran Michael Gambon as a chief editor. The motion picture was professionally directed by Piotr Szkopiak, an ordinary TV director.
The historic events in which this movie are based result to be the following ones: Hitler wanted to avoid facing a possible alliance of the Soviet Union, Britain and France. The Western democracies were equally aware of the Soviets' potential to deter German expansion but their negotiations with Stalin did not lead to any agreement. At the same time, however, Hitler had set aside his ideological differences with Stalin in the hopes of making an alliance. In August 1939 he offered Stalin a deal: If the Soviets allowed Germany to attack Western Poland, they would receive eastern Poland and Baltic states. The Munich capitulation of France and Britain to Hitler's demands convinced that they would be unreliable allies. He decided that he had to cope with German expansion eastward on his own, without their help. In late August 1939, German foreign Secretary Joachin Von Ribentropp visited Moscow to sign with Molotov a German-Soviet Nonagression Pact, which included the deal over territory. The agreement between two nations at opposite political extremes, fascism on one side, communism on the other, shocked the world. It also left Hitler with a free hand in Poland. Hitler used an apparent Polish raid on a Radio Station in the German border town of Gleiwitz as an excuse to invade Poland the following day, September 1, 1939. Two days later, on September 3, France and Britain declared war on Germany, WWII had begun. Beaten back by the Germans, Polish forces were now attacked from the east. The Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin ordered his Red Army to cross into eastern Poland. He claimed that he wanted to prevent anarchy caused by the collapse of Polish government. Thousands of Soviet troops poured across the border and raced west to link up with German troops. Organized Polish resistance to the invaders collapsed. In the last week of September Polish troops in Modlin and Warsaw surrounded to the Germans, A small garrison of 4.500 men held out on the Hel Peninsula near Danzing until October 2. Some 694.000 Polish were seized by the victorious Germans and more than 217.000 Poles were rounded up by the Red Army. Both the Germans and Soviets treated the Poles with great brutality. Stalin ordered most of his prisoners deported to the Gulag (a system brutal labor camps) and later taking more than 20.000 officer prisoners were executed in secret.
This notable movie is a vivid portrayal about war and post-war along with a criminal intrigue in which an obstinate journalist attempts to find out real identity of an Eastern European refugee resulting in unexpected consequences. War has rarely been rendered in such an horrid, utterly grim manner, especially in its final part. Harrowing, unnerving drama which depicts the horror of war with a terrible massacre, a secret that has been kept hidden for far too many years and maintaining his possible connection to the British government's collusion in the cover up of one of Joseph Stalin's most notorious crimes. The story contains some overwhelming sequences as the massacre across the Katyn wood and including some actual documentary. Stars Alex Pettyfer who gives an acceptable acting as a young, ambitious journalist who risks love, career, and ultimately his life to uncover the surprising true by taking a notebook. He's well accompanied by a good cast, such as: Robert Wieckiewicz, Talulah Riley and special mention for the veteran Michael Gambon as a chief editor. The motion picture was professionally directed by Piotr Szkopiak, an ordinary TV director.
The historic events in which this movie are based result to be the following ones: Hitler wanted to avoid facing a possible alliance of the Soviet Union, Britain and France. The Western democracies were equally aware of the Soviets' potential to deter German expansion but their negotiations with Stalin did not lead to any agreement. At the same time, however, Hitler had set aside his ideological differences with Stalin in the hopes of making an alliance. In August 1939 he offered Stalin a deal: If the Soviets allowed Germany to attack Western Poland, they would receive eastern Poland and Baltic states. The Munich capitulation of France and Britain to Hitler's demands convinced that they would be unreliable allies. He decided that he had to cope with German expansion eastward on his own, without their help. In late August 1939, German foreign Secretary Joachin Von Ribentropp visited Moscow to sign with Molotov a German-Soviet Nonagression Pact, which included the deal over territory. The agreement between two nations at opposite political extremes, fascism on one side, communism on the other, shocked the world. It also left Hitler with a free hand in Poland. Hitler used an apparent Polish raid on a Radio Station in the German border town of Gleiwitz as an excuse to invade Poland the following day, September 1, 1939. Two days later, on September 3, France and Britain declared war on Germany, WWII had begun. Beaten back by the Germans, Polish forces were now attacked from the east. The Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin ordered his Red Army to cross into eastern Poland. He claimed that he wanted to prevent anarchy caused by the collapse of Polish government. Thousands of Soviet troops poured across the border and raced west to link up with German troops. Organized Polish resistance to the invaders collapsed. In the last week of September Polish troops in Modlin and Warsaw surrounded to the Germans, A small garrison of 4.500 men held out on the Hel Peninsula near Danzing until October 2. Some 694.000 Polish were seized by the victorious Germans and more than 217.000 Poles were rounded up by the Red Army. Both the Germans and Soviets treated the Poles with great brutality. Stalin ordered most of his prisoners deported to the Gulag (a system brutal labor camps) and later taking more than 20.000 officer prisoners were executed in secret.
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- El último testigo
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- $3,058
- Runtime1hour37minutes
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