Great Patriotic War, early 1940s. After barely surviving a battle with a mysterious, ghostly-white Tiger tank, Red Army Sergeant Ivan Naydenov becomes obsessed with its destruction.Great Patriotic War, early 1940s. After barely surviving a battle with a mysterious, ghostly-white Tiger tank, Red Army Sergeant Ivan Naydenov becomes obsessed with its destruction.Great Patriotic War, early 1940s. After barely surviving a battle with a mysterious, ghostly-white Tiger tank, Red Army Sergeant Ivan Naydenov becomes obsessed with its destruction.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 4 wins & 8 nominations total
- Smirnov
- (as Dmitriy Bykovskiy)
- Gitler
- (as Karl Krantskovski)
- Keytel
- (as Kristian Redl)
- Shtumpf
- (as Klaus Gryunberg)
- Frideburg
- (as Vilmar Biri)
- Nemetskiy ofitser
- (as Maykl Shenk)
- Voennvrach
- (as M. Shashlova)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
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
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.
Did you know
- TriviaOne of the wrecked tanks on the train, near the beginning, was a British Matilda, of which about 1,000 were supplied to Russia.
- Quotes
Fedotov: The war's ended, Naydenov. Did you ear, Ivan? The end of the war. It's all over.
Naydenov: Until I finish him off the war isn't finished, Comrade Colonel.
Fedotov: He's not there. Since the battle at the Vistula, he's gone.
Naydenov: He's waiting. He is. He'll wait twenty years, fifty, maybe a hundred. And then he'll crawl out. He must be destroyed. You know that has to be done.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Fury (2014)
- How long is White Tiger?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- Belyy tigr
- Filming locations
- Moscow, Russia(military training ground)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $11,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $3,427,641
- Runtime1 hour 44 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1