Plot:
Plot introduction: In the Battle of Grozny in 1995, the fierce street fighting was like the Stalingrad of the year. Both sides of Russia and Chechnya suffered heavy casualties. Even the US military was amazed that "it can't afford such an urban war". A typical low-cost film, this is a movie about the First Chechen War made by the Russians themselves. It tells the story of a Russian field hospital being attacked by Chechen terrorists. The photographer used realistic techniques to deliberately shoot many tragic scenes that have never been depicted in previous war-themed films. Chechen mercenaries cut off the heads of Russian soldiers, hung them on rockets and shot them at the other side; Russian tank drivers were ordered to crush the bodies of their comrades. There is no "Leave no one behind" declaration in "Black Howk Down" here, only choking gunpowder, infinite hatred and bitter victory. To be honest, if this film had the financial support of American blockbusters, it would definitely be a box office success, at least the 1997 film would never be unknown to this day. But reality is reality. Although the images are blurry, the camera positions are monotonous, the sound effects are childish and there are few special effects, these cannot prevent the film from showing us a bloody, naked, death-filled and hysterical Chechen war. There is no heroic charge like conquering the Winter Palace, but tanks are advancing in a roundabout way, crushing the bodies of comrades; there is no guidance from the glorious ideas of Marx, Engels, Lenin and Stalin, but there are two perverted female gang snipers who specialize in shooting men's lower body... This film subverts too many things and shapes too many things.