
Western frontiers of the USSR, 1942. The region is under German occupation. A man is wrongly accused of collaboration. Desperate to save his dignity, he faces impossible moral choice.... (Full plot summary below)
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Western frontiers of the USSR, 1942. The region is under German occupation. A man is wrongly accused of collaboration. Desperate to save his dignity, he faces impossible moral choice.
Leave your thoughts about In the Fog.
| London Evening StandardDerek Malcolm[An] austere but never ponderous film about war, and its effect on those caught up in impossible circumstances ... |
| GuardianPeter BradshawIn the Fog is an intense, slow-burning and haunting drama. |
| Chicago ReaderBen SachsDirector Sergei Loznitsa often employs dreamy, intricately choreographed long-takes reminiscent of Russian filmmakers Andrei Tarkovsky, Aleksei Guerman, and Aleksandr Sokurov. |
| The ListTom DawsonThe performances possess a powerful authenticity, whilst the poignancy of the fog-bound finale lingers in the mind. |
| Observer (UK)Philip FrenchSergei Loznitsa's stark parable about Soviet collaboration with the Nazis has echoes of Tolstoy and Dostoevsky. |
| Empire MagazineDavid ParkinsonIt's a stark vision of humanity in a hellish world. Tough and thought-provoking. |
| VarietyLeslie FelperinIn the Fog explores the moralities of wartime with restraint and exacting execution. |
| MUBIIgnatiy VishnevetskyIn an era when vague is en vogue-when filmmakers are more likely to find acclaim for posing big questions than for trying to answer them-In the Fog stands out for being resoundingly unambiguous. |
| Los Angeles TimesBetsy SharkeyIntimate in the telling, sweeping in the implications, Loznitsa has created an unusually incisive film. |
| The New RepublicDavid ThomsonIn the Fog, which seems to me a masterpiece, is about occupation and the destruction of an understanding of one's own history. |