海角大神

海角大神 / Text

'1945' is a compact study of wartime guilt

As a Hungarian village prepares for a wedding after V-E Day, two strangers arrive.

By Peter Rainer , Film critic

Movies shot in black and white, especially in the modern era, are often described as 鈥渟tark,鈥 but there鈥檚 no other way to characterize the visuals in the marvelous Hungarian movie 鈥1945.鈥 The look of the film perfectly emblematizes the story. Set a few months after V-E Day, it takes place in a single summer afternoon in a small village. The gruff local notary and pharmacy owner (P茅ter Rudolf) is preparing for the wedding of his son (Bence Tasn谩di) to the stunning beauty Kisr贸zsi (D贸ra Sztarenki), who still has eyes for a burly returning soldier (Tam谩s Szab贸 Kimmel).

Into this tightknit cauldron of fear and wariness stride two mysterious Orthodox Jews, a bearded older man (Iv谩n Angelusz) and his son (Marcell Nagy), both dressed in black and transporting a bulky trunk containing something that is only revealed at the end of the film. What brings these silent, grim-faced men to the village? The reigning theory is that they have returned to reclaim property stolen from them by some of the selfsame villagers who gave them up to the Nazis.

As the paranoia expands, the town鈥檚 central inhabitants are revealed in all their naked apprehension. It鈥檚 a good bet that the director had 鈥淗igh Noon鈥澛爄n mind when he made this film, but the comparison ends there. As a compact study of wartime guilt, the film has the look and feel of a waking nightmare. Grade: A- (This movie is not rated.)聽聽