Agrega una trama en tu idiomaAn Italian lieutenant is wounded on the Eastern Front, in Russia. While he is on a hospital train, the man remembers the love story that made him a father. During the journey an air alert fo... Leer todoAn Italian lieutenant is wounded on the Eastern Front, in Russia. While he is on a hospital train, the man remembers the love story that made him a father. During the journey an air alert forces the train to stop in the lieutenant's hometown, where his old love and the son he's n... Leer todoAn Italian lieutenant is wounded on the Eastern Front, in Russia. While he is on a hospital train, the man remembers the love story that made him a father. During the journey an air alert forces the train to stop in the lieutenant's hometown, where his old love and the son he's never met still live.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Fotos
- Clara
- (as Maria Mercader)
- L'oste
- (sin créditos)
- Vincenzo, un contadino
- (sin créditos)
- Il capo cuoco
- (sin créditos)
- Sallustri
- (sin créditos)
- Un fattore
- (sin créditos)
- Ufficiale
- (sin créditos)
- La nonnina al ricovero
- (sin créditos)
- Il sacerdote
- (sin créditos)
- L'aiuto cuoco
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
The film opens with a surprisingly intense and chaotic battle sequence, depicting an Italian assault on a fortified Soviet position along the Eastern Front. It's a brief but striking moment, filled with abrupt handheld camera movements, explosions rendered through minimal effects, and a spatial disorientation that heightens the tension rather than clarifies the action. This direct engagement with combat is unusual for Italian productions of the time, which often avoided showing the war too explicitly or framed it through distant allegory. Here, the violence is immediate, and the consequences are clear: the soldiers wounded in this attack become the central presence for the remainder of the film.
Once aboard the hospital train that gives structure to the rest of the narrative, the cinematographic choices shift markedly. The palette is subdued, the lighting naturalistic, and the compositions favor medium close-ups and stillness. The train becomes both a refuge and a site of quiet moral accounting. There is little dynamism in the traditional sense-no crosscutting between multiple narrative strands, no overt manipulation of tempo. The pacing is deliberate, almost liturgical, reinforcing a sense of resignation and inevitability.
Performances remain controlled, bordering on ritualistic. The wounded are portrayed with stoicism rather than anguish, their pain not denied but sublimated. Dialogue is sparse, with emotional weight carried through gesture and rhythm rather than overt dramatization. The acting tradition drawn upon is closer to theatrical discipline than cinematic spontaneity, which may render the characters archetypal to some viewers. But within the ideological framework of the time, this abstraction serves a purpose: to elevate the suffering soldier into a figure of sacrifice rather than individual complexity.
Sound design contributes decisively to this atmosphere. The musical score is minimal, appearing only to underscore moments of reflection or transition. More prominent are the mechanical sounds of the train itself-the churning of wheels, the hiss of steam-used not merely as background noise but as a kind of heartbeat. This emphasis on diegetic sound reinforces the idea of time suspended, of a journey whose destination is less geographical than moral.
By 1943, when this film was released, Italy was in crisis. Mussolini's regime had lost its grip on large parts of the country, and the Allied advance was already underway. In this context, the film reads less like high propaganda and more like a gesture of ideological repositioning. It does not celebrate victory or glorify Fascist power. Instead, it places the Italian soldier in a posture of suffering, faith, and dignity. This shift in tone is subtle but telling: an early effort to reshape national identity around endurance and compassion rather than conquest.
This moral reframing aligns closely with what would later be formalized as the myth of Italiani brava gente-the idea that Italian soldiers were humane, merciful, and fundamentally different from their German counterparts. Although fully articulated only after the war, often in service of Italy's reintegration into the Western alliance system, the seeds of that myth are already visible here. The soldiers are not shown as occupiers, ideologues, or executioners; they are caregivers and victims. Their suffering is sanitized, and their presence in the Soviet theatre is stripped of political or colonial context. There is no reference to civilian populations, no engagement with the atrocities committed by Italian forces in other campaigns such as Greece or the Balkans. Instead, what's offered is a purified image of sacrifice, as if anticipating the need for a future moral alibi.
A particularly relevant comparison can be drawn with The White Ship (La nave bianca, 1941), a film of similar structure and purpose. Both center their narratives on military medical transport-one at sea, the other by rail-and both aim to construct a symbolic image of the wounded Italian soldier as a site of national virtue. However, while the earlier film adopts a more openly didactic and documentary tone, using real naval personnel and institutional narration, this later production opts for a more contemplative mood. The ship, in the former, functions as a mobile extension of state power and discipline. The train, here, becomes a kind of purgatorial space: a vessel for redemption, pain, and unspoken doubt.
Technically, the editing is sober and measured. There is no effort to build tension through montage. Instead, sequences are allowed to unfold with a quiet gravity, producing a cumulative emotional effect rooted less in plot than in repetition-ritual acts of care, moments of prayer, and brief, restrained exchanges between men marked by the weight of their shared ordeal. The absence of enemy combatants after the opening battle-and the complete invisibility of the Soviet civilian population-serve to depoliticize the context of the conflict and isolate the suffering of the Italians as the sole narrative concern.
That selectivity is not accidental. It is an ethical and ideological strategy that anticipates the postwar need to redefine national responsibility. By presenting its soldiers only in the roles of victims and healers, the film actively participates in a form of moral laundering. It does not deny the war-it reconfigures its meaning. What emerges is not a triumphalist vision of military glory, but an early contribution to the reframing of national identity through martyrdom, compassion, and spiritual endurance.
In this sense, the film is less about war than about how a nation might remember it-or be remembered by others. That it was produced before Italy's formal shift of allegiance only sharpens its ambiguity. It is a state-sponsored work whose ideological core is already shifting beneath its surface. What is offered is not a confident affirmation of values, but a portrait of human suffering shaped carefully to survive the coming realignment. The soldier who suffers, prays, and forgives becomes a figure flexible enough to endure any regime.
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 25min(85 min)
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido