The Last Summer 1944

  • 105'
  • Finland
  • 1992
Finland won the Winter War, and fast. The Continuation War was something else: the fighting went on for more than three years (June '41 - September '44) and the nation was slowly bleeding dry; in the end, it took a political ruse to get Finland out of this mess. Even more than The Year 1939 (1993) and The Year 1952 (1980), The Last Summer 1944 is a work of collective remembrance - an oratory, really, a memorial mass for a time and people long gone. Von Bagh uses comparatively little archival material here - instead, with love and compassion, worry and scepticism, he gazes long and hard into the faces of elderly people trying to talk about those last months of tired drudgery: of time slowing down more and more until that standstill became capitulation. A monument to unknown oral history.

Director
Peter von Bagh
Country of production
Finland
Year
1992
Festival Edition
IFFR 2012
Length
105'
Medium
16mm
Original title
Viimeinen kesä 1944
Language
Finnish
Producer
Heikki Takkinen
Production Company
Filminor
Cinematography
Jussi Äkräs
Editor
Anne Lakanen
Sound Design
Martti Turunen
Director
Peter von Bagh
Country of production
Finland
Year
1992
Festival Edition
IFFR 2012
Length
105'
Medium
16mm
Original title
Viimeinen kesä 1944
Language
Finnish
Producer
Heikki Takkinen
Production Company
Filminor
Cinematography
Jussi Äkräs
Editor
Anne Lakanen
Sound Design
Martti Turunen