A Disgraceful Attempt at Romanticizing a Tyrant
I don't know what's worse - the movie itself, the idea behind it, or the country that decided to romanticize one of the world's tyrants by portraying him as a "good" character. Who's next on the director's list - the "nice guy" with a side-part and a tiny mustache?
This film is not just bad, it is offensive. It trivializes history, mocks the suffering of millions, and turns one of humanity's darkest figures into a shallow caricature of "misunderstood heroism." The script is hollow, the direction is tone-deaf, and the entire production feels like a desperate attempt to provoke controversy instead of telling a meaningful story.
Cinema has the power to challenge, to teach, and to move us - but this film chooses the opposite path: to distort, to glorify, and to offend. How anyone could watch, let alone make, something this disgraceful is beyond comprehension.
This film is not just bad, it is offensive. It trivializes history, mocks the suffering of millions, and turns one of humanity's darkest figures into a shallow caricature of "misunderstood heroism." The script is hollow, the direction is tone-deaf, and the entire production feels like a desperate attempt to provoke controversy instead of telling a meaningful story.
Cinema has the power to challenge, to teach, and to move us - but this film chooses the opposite path: to distort, to glorify, and to offend. How anyone could watch, let alone make, something this disgraceful is beyond comprehension.
- it0mac
- 2 sep 2025