Natural Light | Little White Lies

Nat­ur­al Light

12 Nov 2021 / Released: 12 Nov 2021

Soldier in military uniform with serious expression, holding rifle.
Soldier in military uniform with serious expression, holding rifle.
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Anticipation.

Dénes Nagy’s Silver Bear award is a huge victory for Hungarian cinema.

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Enjoyment.

A test of patience. (Or, war bad, protagonist sad.)

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In Retrospect.

Ripens slowly only to become stale.

This atmos­pher­ic World War Two dra­ma from Hun­gar­i­an direc­tor Dénes Nagy is too dour for its own good.

Unlike its title sug­gests, light is most­ly absent in this cold World War Two dra­ma, where sto­ic Hun­gar­i­an farmer István Semet­ka (Fer­enc Szabó) is enlist­ed as sec­ond lieu­tenant in a unit sent to hunt down Sovi­et par­ti­sans. They reach an iso­lat­ed vil­lage after their com­man­der is killed in an ambush. Semet­ka takes com­mand in a man­ner that’s vacant, pas­sive and detached – a tes­ta­ment to the need to stay emo­tion­less in order to sur­vive the atroc­i­ties of war.

It’s a claus­tro­pho­bic film, where the crush­ing­ly bleak nature of war is made to feel tan­gi­ble. The char­ac­ters are played not by pro­fes­sion­al actors, but agri­cul­tur­al work­ers from rur­al Hun­gary and Latvia, and their nat­u­ral­is­tic per­for­mances are suit­ably framed by Tamás Dobos’ tex­tured cam­er­a­work and Dénes Nagy’s sharp direc­tion. There’s an oppres­sive feel­ing that trans­lates to monot­o­ny, but it does man­age to trans­fer Semetka’s emo­tion­al tem­pera­ment to the view­er: the feel­ing of suf­fer­ing in silence.

That’s only if you’re not sick of war movies and you enjoy low-lit, slow-paced nar­ra­tives and dour imagery. This low-on-dia­logue, low-on-action, high-on-atmos­phere feat is deeply cin­e­mat­ic, yet begs the ques­tions: is there any­thing new to be said about World War Two, and is Nagy’s effort enough to stand out in this ter­ri­bly over­crowd­ed genre? The answer, alas, is no.

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