![]() ![]() I would recommend anyone, with a spark of humanity, sit down and watch this film. If Mr Dabell found the film boring, maybe he should look to himself, maybe it's because Mr Dabell is a boring person. The film was true to the book and (what's more important in my eyes) true to the spirit of the times about which the book was written. ![]() Where to? Certain death obviously, so any talk of digging tunnels, forging papers and planning escape routes (a la The Great Escape) were a complete waste of time. Feelings that I'm sure were felt by the actual inmates of such prisons back in those days. ![]() ![]() I do remember the feeling of utter hopelessness, of futility coming through in the film. It made such an impact on me that I have never forgotten it I have tried to get a copy for many years, alas without success. Dabell could complain about the film being boring with, as he puts it, "sparse stretches with barely any dialogue and barely any events begin to tire the viewer." What did Mr Dabell expect? A series of comic sketches, interspersed with some witty banter as the inmates hopped and skipped their way through the snow to their place of work? I saw the film back in the 70s and have not seen it since. This is not a review (as such) about Ivan Denisovich, more a counter to the comments made by a previous reviewer. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |