2008-07-13, 19:21
#1
Citat:
The true history of Japanese Unit 731, from it's beginnings in the 1930's to it's demise in 1945, and the subsequent trials in Khabarovsk, USSR, of many of the Japanese doctors from Unit 731. The facts are told, and previously unknown evidence is revealed by an eyewitness to these events, former doctor and military translator, Anatoly Protasov. Part documentary and part feature, the story is shown from the perspective of a young Japanese nurse who witnessed many of horrors, and a young Japanese officer who is torn between his sincere convictions that he is serving the greater purpose, and the deep sympathy he feels for an imprisoned Russian girl. His life is a living hell as he's compelled to carry out atrocious experiments on the other prisoners, using them as guinea pigs in this shocking tale of mankind's barbarity. Philosophy of a knife is truly one of the most violent, brutal and harrowing movies ever made.
Vad tror alla ni gore-heads på forumet om denna lilla pärla ifrån den ryska regissören till Nais b.la, som ni ser i synopsisen cirkulerar filmen i samma anda som Men Behind the Sun, alltså kring de japanska fånglägerna 731, där tortyr begicks emot kinesiska krigsfångar. Filmen är i snitt fyra timmar lång, skall vara bland det grövsta som gjorts och jag peppar så in i norden på att detta kommer gå vägen.
Hör av mig senare ikväll/i morgon då jag sett den, då jag lär få dela upp titten på 2 timmar åt gången p.g.a. längden.