69 reviews
Now to start off with, if you are planning on watching this film expecting another typical war movie, then you might be disappointed! This surreal Russian film is more about courage and mental torture of war, with battle scenes taking a back seat. For that reason I really liked it.
The story kept me captivated and the characters were interesting enough to invest my time in. When the tank battles do take place, I thought they were superbly done, with the mysterious "White Tiger" having a scary and almost indestructible sense about it.
Now one can dismiss this powerful German tank as just that, or you can look deeper and see what it stands for. The director has created a very multi-layered film that will make the deep thinker feel as though he or she has had a good work out.
Not for everyone, but in a world of movies that lack creativity and originality, White Tiger comes highly recommended!
The story kept me captivated and the characters were interesting enough to invest my time in. When the tank battles do take place, I thought they were superbly done, with the mysterious "White Tiger" having a scary and almost indestructible sense about it.
Now one can dismiss this powerful German tank as just that, or you can look deeper and see what it stands for. The director has created a very multi-layered film that will make the deep thinker feel as though he or she has had a good work out.
Not for everyone, but in a world of movies that lack creativity and originality, White Tiger comes highly recommended!
- SpannersGerm669
- Jul 24, 2014
- Permalink
Karen Shakhnazarov's WHITE TIGER resembles a series of Chinese boxes, setting up viewer expectations and then consciously frustrating them. At one level it is a powerful depiction of the realities of tank warfare during the Second World War, with crews cooped up in confined spaces trying their best to outwit their enemies. Some of the sequences are quite breathtakingly shot - especially when the Russian tank commanded by Naydenov (Aleksey Vertkov) stalks the eponymous White Tiger, a German tank with the apparent ability to elude all enemies. At another level, however, WHITE TIGER consciously raises questions in our minds: at the beginning of the film Naydenov suffers 90% burns, yet makes a remarkable recovery. It is as if he has been resurrected. He doesn't actually have a name, but is given one by his fellow-soldiers. And then there is the ending ... after the Nazi troops have surrendered in 1945 to the Soviets, Naydenov is still shown stalking the White Tiger, which he believes will prove a threat for several years to come. This is followed by another sequence involving an actor with a distinct resemblance to Hitler. The film apparently celebrates the Soviet cause in battle, then undercuts itself by suggesting that all forms of armed conflict are inevitable. Through such strategies director Shakhnazarov shows how one person's 'defeat' might be another person's 'victory': such terms are culturally and structurally relative. What is perhaps more significant is to acknowledge the ever-threatening presence of war through time and space.
- l_rawjalaurence
- Jan 25, 2014
- Permalink
Not a terrible film, but the whole magic tank got boring quite fast. I get what they were trying to do, the tiger tank was almost supernatural to those who came across its path, but the movie took it too literally in part.
Some authentic scenes made me think what a great film this could have been.
And, of course being a state funded film, they couldn't resist implying that Europe will always be bad and that the hero will always be ready to destroy the 'tiger' (Europe? ) in ten, fifty or a hundred years time.
Some authentic scenes made me think what a great film this could have been.
And, of course being a state funded film, they couldn't resist implying that Europe will always be bad and that the hero will always be ready to destroy the 'tiger' (Europe? ) in ten, fifty or a hundred years time.
- HaroldGitgood
- Dec 14, 2021
- Permalink
'White Tiger' is not your usual war movie concentrating on heroes or horrors of war. It is a rather allegorical tale about the essence of war. I have to say I guess that I went into the movie with the wrong mindset - horror fantasy about tank commander who must face the undestroyable and mysterious enemy tank. As a genre, war and horror don't mix very well, yet I decided to watch this peculiarity. The film was presented as an action-packed horror epic, and so I went into this. The movie starts with a scene that depicts the aftermath of the tank battle where they recover a tank commander who has lost his memory but not his remarkable skills. From there on the film takes sudden turn into the territories of surrealism and mysticism. That itself is never a bad thing, but. . . It quickly became obvious where the director was going with this thing, and although, I did reset my mind very quickly, the film didn't work for me wholly. It felt kind of bland and sterile. Some parts didn't quite add up or match. It wasn't polished enough for war epic neither it wasn't 'artsy' enough to work as allegory. The pacing wasn't off, and there were some brilliantly directed scenes, especially the final standoff. And the appearing of the White Tiger from the mist nearly gave me goosebumps.
Quite an interesting movie with a thought-provoking concept. At least I thought about this movie afterward. If You happen to read this review before watching 'White Tiger' then I recommend you keep the open mind and not expect some usual war hero action epic. That might help. On the other hand, if the movie is truly great, it should catch your attention anyway no matter how prepared you are or in what mood you are.
I might give this movie another shot, although I got a general idea, the execution wasn't anything special. Yet, I can't call this movie either a boring or total waste of time.
Quite an interesting movie with a thought-provoking concept. At least I thought about this movie afterward. If You happen to read this review before watching 'White Tiger' then I recommend you keep the open mind and not expect some usual war hero action epic. That might help. On the other hand, if the movie is truly great, it should catch your attention anyway no matter how prepared you are or in what mood you are.
I might give this movie another shot, although I got a general idea, the execution wasn't anything special. Yet, I can't call this movie either a boring or total waste of time.
- monsieurfairfax
- May 11, 2020
- Permalink
- clive_slatter
- Jul 11, 2016
- Permalink
It's good film but my expectations were much more. I don't like in this movie artificial pressurization of evil. This story not seems to me realistic, though filmed well and with grand scale. Here is many tanks, charismatic actors, atmosphere of war, but no desired voltage. Clearly that creators have tried to scaring viewer with talk about mystical tank "White Tiger" but in fact tank on a screen looks not so shattering as its fame. Why this tank was such terrifying, such invulnerable? What is his power? Is it ghost or not? I very love films by Karen Shakhnazarov but his new film asks too many questions and can't give any answers, because, in my opinion, creators don't know theirs too, and just had shifted this mission on viewer. "White Tiger" is good story with an excellent idea and look in any case its will be useful and interesting.
Hopefully this will clarify one reviewer's dismay about the Tank in WHITE TIGER. The Tank in question was indeed a real tank. Being a German Tiger I Tank, it was terrifying, powerful and, while not completely invulnerable, its vulnerable points were limited. Built for power and heavy armor in mind, it created a quite real fear among Allied Soldiers, known as "Tiger Fever". The Tiger I was conceived upon Hitler's special request. He wanted a "Super Tank" to outshine the Russian T-34, which is shown in the film. This is more of a Tank review than a Film review, but it suggests something that is rarely communicated in war movies: TERROR. Mangled and charred bodies have become commonplace in movies, and the gunplay has become nothing more than elevated pyrotechnics. While not wholly successful in displaying the full terror that men and women in these situations must have felt, WHITE TIGER is still a worthy film.
The Eastern Front, 1943. After a fierce battle, a young Russian tank driver is hauled out of his burned out tank, more dead than alive. Miraculously he survives and is made the commander of an elite tank crew. Their mission: destroy the mysterious German tank that is wreaking havoc in the sector, and which was responsible for the death of the tankman's crew: the White Tiger.
The movie started very well: had a gritty, realistic feel to it: no gung ho heroics and graphically shows the grim reality of war. Unlike many war movies, equipment was spot-on: T-34s were played by T-34s, for example. Good production values.
Plot looked like it was shaping up to be an interesting one: what is this mysterious German tank and how will the Russians defeat it? Will the Russian plan work?
Unfortunately, that's about the last time it was compelling viewing, as the plot starts to develop holes. The first sign was when the T-34-85 that is sent to tackle the White Tiger only has a 3-man crew - no commander, no assistant driver. I understand why this was done: the writers wanted the main character to be the commander of the tank, while still being the driver (because he was so good at that). So, commander = driver.
The military inaccuracies then start to mount and the movie starts to resemble a supernatural horror movie, rather than a war movie. Plot becomes more and more implausible as it goes on.
It just gets worse and worse. The final act is a total write-off, as the plot goes in a random, tangential direction. Incredibly weak and anti-climactic ending.
Very disappointing.
The movie started very well: had a gritty, realistic feel to it: no gung ho heroics and graphically shows the grim reality of war. Unlike many war movies, equipment was spot-on: T-34s were played by T-34s, for example. Good production values.
Plot looked like it was shaping up to be an interesting one: what is this mysterious German tank and how will the Russians defeat it? Will the Russian plan work?
Unfortunately, that's about the last time it was compelling viewing, as the plot starts to develop holes. The first sign was when the T-34-85 that is sent to tackle the White Tiger only has a 3-man crew - no commander, no assistant driver. I understand why this was done: the writers wanted the main character to be the commander of the tank, while still being the driver (because he was so good at that). So, commander = driver.
The military inaccuracies then start to mount and the movie starts to resemble a supernatural horror movie, rather than a war movie. Plot becomes more and more implausible as it goes on.
It just gets worse and worse. The final act is a total write-off, as the plot goes in a random, tangential direction. Incredibly weak and anti-climactic ending.
Very disappointing.
First things first - if you expect a "standard" war film like Saving Private Ryan or Enemy at the Gates or Fury, then this is the wrong place to look. White Tiger is a Russian film set in the dying days of WW2. The titular AFV is a lone German tank which appears mysteriously on the battlefield and destroys Russian tanks by the dozen, whilst seeming invincible. No crew is ever seen, with the result that it feels like a mash-up between the great white whale from Moby Dick and the homicidal tanker in Spielberg's Duel.
Hunting the tank is a character halfway between Captain Ahab and Ishmael; a Russian tank-man who makes a miraculous recovery from seemingly fatal burns, only to find that he has total amnesia. He only knows that he can talk to the souls of tanks, and that he must hunt the white tiger.
Sounds odd? That's the point. The film is heavy on metaphor and mysticism, and in the latter third becomes deeply surreal. There's a scene of three German generals signing the document of surrender, then enjoying a strange meal. Then cut to a line of German PoWs; then to Ahab/Ishmael alone in a field with his tank. The white tiger hasn't gone, he says. It's merely hiding, and will be back in a hundred years or so. Then the final scene: is it real? Is it symbolic? Is it happening in someone's head? You decide.
This is a cerebral film. It asks questions, and leaves the viewer to struggle for answers.
In Russian, with subtitles.
Hunting the tank is a character halfway between Captain Ahab and Ishmael; a Russian tank-man who makes a miraculous recovery from seemingly fatal burns, only to find that he has total amnesia. He only knows that he can talk to the souls of tanks, and that he must hunt the white tiger.
Sounds odd? That's the point. The film is heavy on metaphor and mysticism, and in the latter third becomes deeply surreal. There's a scene of three German generals signing the document of surrender, then enjoying a strange meal. Then cut to a line of German PoWs; then to Ahab/Ishmael alone in a field with his tank. The white tiger hasn't gone, he says. It's merely hiding, and will be back in a hundred years or so. Then the final scene: is it real? Is it symbolic? Is it happening in someone's head? You decide.
This is a cerebral film. It asks questions, and leaves the viewer to struggle for answers.
In Russian, with subtitles.
This is a uniquely different war film without constant battle scenes and war gore. In fact, this is more of a mystery, supernatural drama film, and very interesting, too! I found the film's color very clear and realistic, and the acting very natural - especially Aleksey Vertkov as Naydenov. Naydenov himself is as mysterious as the White Tiger and added another dimension to the mystery. The village battle scene when he finally came face to face with the White Tiger was awesome! It was refreshing to see the fight scenes without overbearing music. Spoiler: the film does leave you hanging, though, having to decide for yourself what happened to the White Tiger and Naydenov, and the meaning of Hitler at the end, and how to interpret and connect the loose ends.
- paulclaassen
- Jun 9, 2018
- Permalink
- I_Ailurophile
- Aug 14, 2021
- Permalink
Starts out as a perfectly good war flick and turns more and more surreal during the last thirty minutes. Or maybe I should say, it becomes a meditation over the meaning, the spirit, the essence of war. As a whole, White Tiger is like an episode of Twilight Zone filmed in the gritty philosophical manner of Tarkovsky - some faces and scenes almost appear like a nod to the protagonists of Stalker. It probably won't please those who watch this for the war part, and because marketed as a war movie, it probably fails to reach out those looking for the surreal and mystical. However, even if this film is an odd bag, it has the potential to leave a lasting impression on the viewer because the point it makes in the end (in the fireplace monologue scene) is utterly taboo-breaking with thoughts no Western-made WW2 films dared to express. 8/10 for a few sluggish scenes towards the end.
I mostly enjoyed this movie...
I'm astonished by how the Russians could put so many T-34s into a single movie. Very impressive. I tend to enjoy Russian movies of the Eastern Front aka Great Fatherland War. They are made with feeling and realism.
i sometimes get annoyed by those who write Trivia critiques about technical aspects. Someone wrote about how the film maker adapted a Soviet tank to create the German one. Yes i had noticed an oddity, but I just ignored it. I like to enjoy my movies not forensically analyse them.
I won't do a spoiler, lets just say the ending was a bit of a different slant to the rest of the movie and somewhat unexpected.
I may buy this on DVD. Def. worth watching.
I'm astonished by how the Russians could put so many T-34s into a single movie. Very impressive. I tend to enjoy Russian movies of the Eastern Front aka Great Fatherland War. They are made with feeling and realism.
i sometimes get annoyed by those who write Trivia critiques about technical aspects. Someone wrote about how the film maker adapted a Soviet tank to create the German one. Yes i had noticed an oddity, but I just ignored it. I like to enjoy my movies not forensically analyse them.
I won't do a spoiler, lets just say the ending was a bit of a different slant to the rest of the movie and somewhat unexpected.
I may buy this on DVD. Def. worth watching.
- aldebaran68
- Mar 14, 2020
- Permalink
For a low budget film it looks good and there are some decent battle scenes. And it has a very interesting premise. That's the good part.
Unfortunately that about all this film has going for it. The acting is pretty wooden. You never know what anyone is thinking, or feeling. There seem to be plenty of pensive moments but they don't reveal anything. Because not one character in the whole movie has a complete character arc. Who they are when they first appear is exactly who they are when the film ends. No one is changed by anything. No one learns anything. Not one plot point it ever resolved.
The first and second acts plod along, not at a sluggish pace, but none too swiftly. And then, before you know it, the war is over. Literally, just like that. Not with a bang. Not with some triumphant battle. Just one long and boring scene with Germany surrendering to the Soviets. You wonder if this will eventually lead to something. But it doesn't. This is followed by another long and boring scene of marching captured German soldiers. And you think this is going to lead to something. But it doesn't. I can't help but wonder if either they couldn't figure out how to end it. Or that the whole movie was created just to give some public service announcement about the horrors of war.
Unfortunately that about all this film has going for it. The acting is pretty wooden. You never know what anyone is thinking, or feeling. There seem to be plenty of pensive moments but they don't reveal anything. Because not one character in the whole movie has a complete character arc. Who they are when they first appear is exactly who they are when the film ends. No one is changed by anything. No one learns anything. Not one plot point it ever resolved.
The first and second acts plod along, not at a sluggish pace, but none too swiftly. And then, before you know it, the war is over. Literally, just like that. Not with a bang. Not with some triumphant battle. Just one long and boring scene with Germany surrendering to the Soviets. You wonder if this will eventually lead to something. But it doesn't. This is followed by another long and boring scene of marching captured German soldiers. And you think this is going to lead to something. But it doesn't. I can't help but wonder if either they couldn't figure out how to end it. Or that the whole movie was created just to give some public service announcement about the horrors of war.
- freemanpatrick7
- Jun 2, 2017
- Permalink
a film about war. a surviver. a tank. a fight like Melville's Moby Dick. image of battle in smoke lens. and all ingredients for this type of movie. it is difficult to say if it is a good film or not. crumbs of many histories about last world conflict are stones in a not flat mount. all is at right place. but , in few moments, the tale is only a sketch.sure, a film far from usual cages of ideology or triumphalism is a nice work. tanks seduction is always fresh. but is it enough ? after a splendid story the final taste is almost bitter. because the final of confrontation is more delicate, the script puts in public imagination the solution. and it is not really fair ! conclusion - too many directions, a not inspired mixture between magic and war facts. but , however, it is not a disappointing experience. only a trip in the corners of a myth shadow.
White Tiger is the most interesting World War 2 film I've ever seen that includes a blending of mild supernatural elements, with in this case, the Russian pushback against the invading Germans, during the last 18 months of World War 2. In a clear nod to Melville's Moby Dick, Aleksey Vertkov plays Ivan Naydenov, a badly wounded Soviet tank commander on the Eastern Front, who, after a miraculous recovery, becomes obsessed with tracking down and destroying a mysterious, invincible Nazi tank, which the Soviet troops call the "White Tiger".
The film begins as a fairly typical war movie, but as the narrative progresses it becomes increasingly allegorical in nature, but in an intriguingly, compelling manner. This is due to the great performances elicited from the whole cast, but especially Vertkov and Gerasim Arkhipov who plays Captain Sharipov, Naydenov's handler/supervisor so to speak, who becomes increasingly drawn in towards Naydenov's mystical approach, towards taking the battle up to a seemingly invulnerable and implacable foe.
If the film had just concentrated on this main thread, I feel director and co-writer Karen Shakhnazarov would have succeeded in creating quite a unique picture. The finished product is good, but unfortunately is padded out with unnecessary sub-threads that appear almost unrelated to the main story and adversely affect the pace of the overall film. It's not spoiling in saying that we are delivered a very long sequence in the third act dealing with Germany's surrender to the Russian Army in Berlin; a very long way from the fields of the Eastern Front and the White Tiger.
Then after what I thought was a good conclusion to the White Tiger story drawing parallels again with both the Moby Dick tale and even Arthurian legends of a resurrected defender returning to aid his country in an hour of need, another oddity occurs.
(A resurrected ?) Hitler suddenly appears for a fireside chat of at least 5 minutes with a shadowy interviewer, as he unnecessarily attempts to justify why his and Germany's actions would ultimately have been beneficial to Russia and its peoples. It's a pretty bizarre add on and I think is only there to provide further irrelevant exposition as to the dangers of militarism, a message, which had been more than capably transmitted earlier in the film.
White Tiger is a quite unusual war film that is still very much worth seeing, but in my opinion would have benefitted greatly from more stringent editing.
The film begins as a fairly typical war movie, but as the narrative progresses it becomes increasingly allegorical in nature, but in an intriguingly, compelling manner. This is due to the great performances elicited from the whole cast, but especially Vertkov and Gerasim Arkhipov who plays Captain Sharipov, Naydenov's handler/supervisor so to speak, who becomes increasingly drawn in towards Naydenov's mystical approach, towards taking the battle up to a seemingly invulnerable and implacable foe.
If the film had just concentrated on this main thread, I feel director and co-writer Karen Shakhnazarov would have succeeded in creating quite a unique picture. The finished product is good, but unfortunately is padded out with unnecessary sub-threads that appear almost unrelated to the main story and adversely affect the pace of the overall film. It's not spoiling in saying that we are delivered a very long sequence in the third act dealing with Germany's surrender to the Russian Army in Berlin; a very long way from the fields of the Eastern Front and the White Tiger.
Then after what I thought was a good conclusion to the White Tiger story drawing parallels again with both the Moby Dick tale and even Arthurian legends of a resurrected defender returning to aid his country in an hour of need, another oddity occurs.
(A resurrected ?) Hitler suddenly appears for a fireside chat of at least 5 minutes with a shadowy interviewer, as he unnecessarily attempts to justify why his and Germany's actions would ultimately have been beneficial to Russia and its peoples. It's a pretty bizarre add on and I think is only there to provide further irrelevant exposition as to the dangers of militarism, a message, which had been more than capably transmitted earlier in the film.
White Tiger is a quite unusual war film that is still very much worth seeing, but in my opinion would have benefitted greatly from more stringent editing.
- spookyrat1
- Mar 8, 2020
- Permalink
Tbh, Two hours of my life I'd take back if I could, I will not get into the deep and meaningful allegories as other reviewers have picked them out.I would disagree that the depictions of WW2 tank combat are very realistic, although things are about as gruesome as they can be made, with the emphasis on what happens when human beings are incinerated in combat either inside or outside of armoured vehicles, the scenes mostly look like the crew went around with a lot of jerry cans of gas splashing it around everything and almost everyone in sight and setting them alight.They put armour-piercing shells through farm-houses and barns...these instantly erupt into billowing flames like they had been napalmed. What is particularly the source or basis of that fiery combustion? Even though tanks themselves of course can and do often burn when hit, often they do not, and the fire on those that we see is also amaterurishly executed, it is not combat-real and just does not look it.
The Soviet tanks are mostly T34-85s, probably genuine museum pieces and necessarily look right enough. So do the fields of scattered wrecks we see in several scenes, an array of German, Soviet and non-Russian allied including a Matilda or Churchill, and maybe an M3 Medium. British and US tanks were sent to the USSR under lend-lease, so that all checks out.
The actual star villain of the show, though, supposed to be a Tiger 1..it is of course a bunch of cutout steel plates welded together on the chassis of something else, its proportions are all wrong, looks like maybe an early Chinese toy designers take on a Tiger 1.
It also is not actually particularly white in colour.
As other reviewers have predicated their reviews pointing out that if you are looking for a Russianised 'FURY" that this is not it, they're right, whatever other things that it might be and might accomplish, it does not get much done right as a straight out Eastern Front armoured warfare movie.
Soviet and German tanks meets Moby Dick and the XFiles.
While there's a lot absent in this movie that I usually take for granted in war movies (namely any infantry combat scenes), I really must applaud this effort on a few fronts.
For one, there is absolutely zero obvious CGI or visual effects in the film. We get to see lots of real vintage tanks including T34/85s, T34/86's, a Panzer IV, and mobile artillery doing what they do best. The loving attention to authentic tank combat reminds me a lot of the other quite recent Finnish film TALI IHANTALA 1944 which similarly failed otherwise to really make a splash.
There's a lot of good scope to the film, especially in terms of costume and sound design. Nothing looks cheap and the anachronisms are kept to an absolute minimum. It's a classically impressive Russian World War 2 adventure in many respects and looks almost like something Sergei Bondarchuk would do were he still been alive. Nicely, the structure is unconventional and it tackles a lot of philosophical areas of interest including mankind's fascination and relationship with warfare and destruction.
Storywise, it's really nothing new for people who haven't seen THE WHITE BUFFALO or THE CAR. I never would have ever imagined I'd ever see a combination of those two films in a war setting, but lo and behold this curiosity. At its core is a loose retelling of "Moby Dick" involving an obsessive quest by a mentally handicapped individual to destroy a mysterious antagonist, here a Tiger Tank that seemingly appears and disappears at will to wreak all kinds of havoc on the Soviet lines.
The biggest complaint here though beyond lack of action or originality is the poor attempt at mocking up a Tiger Tank. However at times from certain angles it works well enough if you squint, but almost unforgivable that the centerpiece of the film is so underwhelmingly realized.
All in all, I'd recommend viewing for the realistic tank combat scenes and lack of CGI. Had it not been for this film, I would be tempted to say that they don't make them like this anymore.
For one, there is absolutely zero obvious CGI or visual effects in the film. We get to see lots of real vintage tanks including T34/85s, T34/86's, a Panzer IV, and mobile artillery doing what they do best. The loving attention to authentic tank combat reminds me a lot of the other quite recent Finnish film TALI IHANTALA 1944 which similarly failed otherwise to really make a splash.
There's a lot of good scope to the film, especially in terms of costume and sound design. Nothing looks cheap and the anachronisms are kept to an absolute minimum. It's a classically impressive Russian World War 2 adventure in many respects and looks almost like something Sergei Bondarchuk would do were he still been alive. Nicely, the structure is unconventional and it tackles a lot of philosophical areas of interest including mankind's fascination and relationship with warfare and destruction.
Storywise, it's really nothing new for people who haven't seen THE WHITE BUFFALO or THE CAR. I never would have ever imagined I'd ever see a combination of those two films in a war setting, but lo and behold this curiosity. At its core is a loose retelling of "Moby Dick" involving an obsessive quest by a mentally handicapped individual to destroy a mysterious antagonist, here a Tiger Tank that seemingly appears and disappears at will to wreak all kinds of havoc on the Soviet lines.
The biggest complaint here though beyond lack of action or originality is the poor attempt at mocking up a Tiger Tank. However at times from certain angles it works well enough if you squint, but almost unforgivable that the centerpiece of the film is so underwhelmingly realized.
All in all, I'd recommend viewing for the realistic tank combat scenes and lack of CGI. Had it not been for this film, I would be tempted to say that they don't make them like this anymore.
As previous commentators have stated, this is an 'unusual' war movie. Despite having a quite good and accurate depiction of fighting on the Eastern Front, including depictions of lend-lease armour at the start of the film, it's the allegorical message that's the main point of the film.
In short, the battle between the White Tiger and the resurrected Russian tanker is an allegory of Russia's centuries old battle with invaders from the West (be they Teutonic knights, Napoleon or Hitler in this case).
The message of the director is that WWII was just another episode in this long struggle and that the White Tiger (western militarism) hasn't been destroyed in 1945, but is waiting dormant for the next episode....and the immortal Russian tanker will once again be there to confront the 'Tiger' again.
The film was made in 2012. Considering current events it's proved to be quite prophetic
In short, the battle between the White Tiger and the resurrected Russian tanker is an allegory of Russia's centuries old battle with invaders from the West (be they Teutonic knights, Napoleon or Hitler in this case).
The message of the director is that WWII was just another episode in this long struggle and that the White Tiger (western militarism) hasn't been destroyed in 1945, but is waiting dormant for the next episode....and the immortal Russian tanker will once again be there to confront the 'Tiger' again.
The film was made in 2012. Considering current events it's proved to be quite prophetic
Immediately after an extremely hard-fought battle, the Soviet Army comes across a number of destroyed tanks with one in particular standing out because the driver is found to be still alive after suffering from severe burns encompassing 90% of his body. Surprisingly, after being taken to a field hospital, he manages to recover and is deemed fit for duty not long afterward. He does, however, suffer from memory loss and as a result he is given the name of "Ivan Naydenov" (Aleksey Vertkov). It's also during this time that he tells them of a special German tank he has seen known as the "White Tiger" that completely destroyed all of the tanks in his company. Although the senior leaders in the Soviet military have doubts about the existence of such a tank, to be on the safe side they put Navdenov in charge of a special prototype and order him to destroy the White Tiger. But what the Soviet leadership doesn't realize, however, is that the White Tiger isn't the only unusual aspect of this particular war and destroying it is not going to be that easy. Now, rather than reveal any more, I will just say that this was a rather odd film which had some good action scenes but, unfortunately, suffered somewhat from a weak ending. To that effect, although I was a little disappointed due to my initial high expectations, this was still a good movie for the most part and I have rated it accordingly. Slightly above average.
Trailer -> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZnKZcGtHNlY
:This Review is Without Spoilers:
If you saw the trailer (linked above), you know what to expect, right? It's Moby Dick with tanks. An action packed cracker about a incredibly gifted tank commander hell-bent on tracking down an invincible ghost tank. Is that what the movie lives up to be?
Well... yes and no.
The first half follows this premise, sure. Atmospheric, gritty, dangerous. it's pretty much just what you were expecting, except everyone is so deadly serious. For crying out loud, we're talking about a ghost tank that vanishes into thin air and doesn't make mistakes? A man 90% covered in burns at the start who fully recovers shortly after? Why couldn't they have accepted how ridiculous that was and just rolled with it? The straight faced approach has it's advantages, sure- the buildup to the first encounter is supremely tense and eerie- but otherwise it just doesn't fit. It's almost like the film scolds us for enjoying this slice of high fantasy.
Also, for all the tanks that explode in the trailer, there are really only two main battle scenes, and while they are excellent (and I do mean excellent- some of the best tank action I've ever seen on film), they make up a relatively small fragment of the film, and leave you shocked when they decide not to show any more.
The other main problem is that the film does a sudden change towards the philosophical side halfway through. Now don't get me wrong- I have nothing against films that explore the introspective manner of human nature, that give you deep thoughts to contemplate after the movie is over, have quiet scenes with characters forced to look at themselves in a new way and so on. It's just that in a film where you advertise it as a tank explosion extravaganza with miracle healing and ghost vehicles, it's the LAST thing you need. The creators may have felt compelled to make a comment on the nature of the war or the people who fought in it. There is a time and place for that. This is not it.
People come to this movie to see what it advertised: tanks shooting and stuff blowing up. Save your more serious commentary for a film that suits the message- not your ghost-tank story! Overall, the first half is OK. Too serious for it's own good, but some real satisfying action in there. The second half... it's just a mess.
Seriously- Frozen Strawberries? What the hell was THAT about!?
:This Review is Without Spoilers:
If you saw the trailer (linked above), you know what to expect, right? It's Moby Dick with tanks. An action packed cracker about a incredibly gifted tank commander hell-bent on tracking down an invincible ghost tank. Is that what the movie lives up to be?
Well... yes and no.
The first half follows this premise, sure. Atmospheric, gritty, dangerous. it's pretty much just what you were expecting, except everyone is so deadly serious. For crying out loud, we're talking about a ghost tank that vanishes into thin air and doesn't make mistakes? A man 90% covered in burns at the start who fully recovers shortly after? Why couldn't they have accepted how ridiculous that was and just rolled with it? The straight faced approach has it's advantages, sure- the buildup to the first encounter is supremely tense and eerie- but otherwise it just doesn't fit. It's almost like the film scolds us for enjoying this slice of high fantasy.
Also, for all the tanks that explode in the trailer, there are really only two main battle scenes, and while they are excellent (and I do mean excellent- some of the best tank action I've ever seen on film), they make up a relatively small fragment of the film, and leave you shocked when they decide not to show any more.
The other main problem is that the film does a sudden change towards the philosophical side halfway through. Now don't get me wrong- I have nothing against films that explore the introspective manner of human nature, that give you deep thoughts to contemplate after the movie is over, have quiet scenes with characters forced to look at themselves in a new way and so on. It's just that in a film where you advertise it as a tank explosion extravaganza with miracle healing and ghost vehicles, it's the LAST thing you need. The creators may have felt compelled to make a comment on the nature of the war or the people who fought in it. There is a time and place for that. This is not it.
People come to this movie to see what it advertised: tanks shooting and stuff blowing up. Save your more serious commentary for a film that suits the message- not your ghost-tank story! Overall, the first half is OK. Too serious for it's own good, but some real satisfying action in there. The second half... it's just a mess.
Seriously- Frozen Strawberries? What the hell was THAT about!?
I very rarely get so scared watching a movie that I have trouble watching it. The depiction of all the gritty details of tank culture was superb. Every moment, every mundane scene had a heavy tension to it -- you never knew what was going to happen next.
The best thriller movies make good use of silence rather than cheesy background music, and this had those silent scenes. The story was kind of like Moby Dick transposed into the WW2 eastern front -- replace the great white whale with White Tiger and Captain Ahab with the mysterious tank commander. Be warned, the movie has a lot of burn victims depicted very realistically.
The best thriller movies make good use of silence rather than cheesy background music, and this had those silent scenes. The story was kind of like Moby Dick transposed into the WW2 eastern front -- replace the great white whale with White Tiger and Captain Ahab with the mysterious tank commander. Be warned, the movie has a lot of burn victims depicted very realistically.
- htrobertson
- Oct 25, 2013
- Permalink
I like how the presented the Tiger as a embodiment of there fears.
There are several layers in the movie, on the surface its just the Russians fighting the Germans. But the underlying story is about fear and that they are not fighting Germans but a invincible Tiger.
Quite a realistic setup and if you like a different concept as most war movies. Go and watch
There are several layers in the movie, on the surface its just the Russians fighting the Germans. But the underlying story is about fear and that they are not fighting Germans but a invincible Tiger.
Quite a realistic setup and if you like a different concept as most war movies. Go and watch