12/13/2023 0 Comments Warsow 2015We owe a deep debt of gratitude to all the brave men and women from Allied and partner nations who have served or are serving in NATO-led missions and operations and in Allies' missions and operations that contribute to the security of the Alliance. These tasks remain fully relevant, are complementary, and contribute to safeguarding the freedom and security of all Allies.ģ. To protect and defend our indivisible security and our common values, the Alliance must and will continue fulfilling effectively all three core tasks as set out in the Strategic Concept: collective defence, crisis management, and cooperative security. We are united in our commitment to the Washington Treaty, the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations (UN), and the vital transatlantic bond. NATO's essential mission is unchanged: to ensure that the Alliance remains an unparalleled community of freedom, peace, security, and shared values, including individual liberty, human rights, democracy, and the rule of law. We are pleased to have been joined by Montenegro, which we have invited to become the 29th member of our Alliance.Ģ. We, the Heads of State and Government of the member countries of the North Atlantic Alliance, have gathered in Warsaw at a defining moment for the security of our nations and populations. Maybe I'm a little biased, because I regard previous Komasa's film Suicide Room as the best psychological drama I've ever seen, but I'm just a spectator and this is what I want to experience while watching movies – real emotions.1. It's made on a grand scale without compromise, shot in wide perspectives with great designer production. It's very realistic, but very fresh in its form with great soundtrack and editing, with some symbolic scenes that may be controversial, mostly in Poland, because Warsaw Uprising is the national tragedy here. This film is simply about death and war burning out feelings, dreams and humanity. Komasa absolutely deprived his movie of any pathos. However here we have one big advantage, Mr. The first scene of Saving Private Ryan comes to my mind when I try to compare the presentation of death during battle, and death at all, in this movie. I have never seen in the cinema such brutality in its pure form, exposed in so natural way and not hidden behind convention. The director Jan Komasa pulls the spectator into his movie and with no mercy forces him to experience the real cruelty of war. Those two things turn him into a walking dead who loses everything and all he wants is vengeance. Everything changes suddenly with the first bullet and with some very tragic moment which he has witnessed. At the beginning there is fun in the war, typical for immature men, and even in the presence of the first death Stefan shows off his bravery in front of the girl. He's not interested in any conspiracy, but when he meets a girl whose name is Ala, by whom he's fascinated and then in love, decides to set himself free from his mother's arms and, against his will, he's involved in the Warsaw Uprising. This is the story of a very young man Stefan who is responsible for his family after his father's death on the front of the Second World War. Although it's shot in a very bright and colorful manner, without visual effects achieved by obscure camera work, it's very dark at the same time. You get it under your skin and when you realize that's it's based on facts you're no longer the same. It squeezes your throat and doesn't let go till the end. This is the movie that can shatter your mind.
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