The Command

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Based on the story of the 2000 Kursk submarine disaster, Kursk follows the final hours of an “unsinkable” Russian nuclear submarine as it sinks to the bottom of the Barents Sea. Some of the crew survives the initial explosion, including officer Mikhail Kalekov, whose pregnant wife and child are waiting back home. Unfortunately, their rescue is complicated by bureaucracy between Russia, France, Norway and Britain, with British navy chief David Russell attempting to convince Russian officials to accept foreign aid. (EuropaCorp USA)

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Reviews (9)

Kaka 

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English The portrayal of the character of the sailors is poor and two-dimensional, even in the tense “it’s not there” moments. The portrayal of the life in a submarine and the accident is, on the other hand, brilliant. It’s dark, claustrophobic, chilling and without pathos. Vinterberg successfully reconstructs an historical event about the life and death of the sailors of a nuclear submarine and the main thing missing is, paradoxically, a bit of life and energy. ()

EvilPhoEniX 

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English I'm not a big fan of submarines and the Navy, so I went into this film more out of curiosity and it wasn't bad. The explosion in Kursk is filmed decently and the following submarine survival drama is filmed entertainingly though it definitely could have been grittier as well as more gripping. I wasn't bored but I'm not the target audience. However, for fans of submarines and movies based on true events, I recommend it. 60%. ()

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Othello 

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English The Command is drowning in an obviously endlessly cut post-production hell where there's no time for practically anything, so the character roles are either melodramatic, expositional, or agents of righteous popular anger, without giving us a chance to lick anything real out of any of them. The sequences with the clucking wives in particular sound almost funny in their attempt to somehow smuggle female characters into the overall story, who in all three scenes gradually don't find out what happened to their husbands. But according to the film's stills from scenes that aren't in the film at all (see gallery), far more importance was probably attached to their relationship with each other and their subsequent desperate inability to act. One thing is rather unique about The Command, though. Namely, that we're watching heroes who find themselves in a situation familiar from many other films that we're used to seeing them overcome in the name of a happy ending and our reward for the suspense. The scenes from inside the submarine have exactly the same character and development as all other scenes of this type, except that we know from the beginning that it's not going to end well and everyone is going to die. Yet we experience the same situations, great sacrifices, and unimpressive heroics that, if it had ended well, would have underscored their importance in preserving the characters of the protagonists. Of course, the feeling of holding your breath in the underwater sequences with the hero trying to pull an unconscious friend above the surface, even though you know they have only a few hours to live anyway, doesn't really inspire suspense so much as it teaches a lesson about the power of self-preservation in the face of an imminent and complete end. Self-preservation that no one will ever know about, but which gives meaning to existence until its last moment. ()

Lima 

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English I remember the TV coverage of the disaster and the film captures it faithfully, including the injection of a sedative to one of the distraught mothers. Anyway, one thing is clear from the film: if something similar happened to any of the NATO armies that the local Putin trolls spit on as much as they can, their leadership might break ranks to save these boys. But the Russian military leadership has a different yardstick, the ‘there’s plenty of us’ rule. In Russia, human life has never been worth anything, ever since the Battle of Stalingrad, when they deployed young unarmed boys to the front lines with firing squads at their backs. As Papa Stalin used to say: “The death of one man is a tragedy, the death of millions is a statistic.” Russia, a land of unlimited possibilities... ()

D.Moore 

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English We haven’t had this good of a submarine film since K-19. It's 100% impressive depressing drama... Especially when it gives the sailors and their families little hope that everything can turn out good after all. And you wish for it with them. However, probably every viewer knows how the events really played out, and that's why those scenes are so strong. Admittedly, I didn't expect much from The Command, but I ended up sitting in the movie theatre and not moving, filled with tension and feeling pretty miserable during the end credits. It is shot great (the directing and camera use the claustrophobic environment to the maximum and, for example, the quest for oxygen is unforgettable), Alexander Desplat's music did not disappoint and for me, the unknown actors - Colin Firth or Max von Sydow - give very believable performances. ()

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