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mahina

(19,289 posts)
Sat Jan 25, 2025, 02:44 AM Saturday

A look into history: Denmark's resistance to Nazis prevailed. A Force More Powerful, pt 2

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There's a lot more to it than that. Poland, Chile, Denmark, India, South Africa- nonviolence worked.
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A look into history: Denmark's resistance to Nazis prevailed. A Force More Powerful, pt 2 (Original Post) mahina Saturday OP
I was in Denmark in September of last year PlanetBev Saturday #1
Word. mahina Saturday #2
Looks good, thanks. Also, "NUMBER 24" Norwegian Resistance in WW2 on Netflix: appalachiablue Saturday #3
Thank you. mahina Saturday #4
TRAILER, MORE... appalachiablue Sunday #5

PlanetBev

(4,249 posts)
1. I was in Denmark in September of last year
Sat Jan 25, 2025, 02:53 AM
Saturday

Great country, great people. These descendants of the Vikings didn’t take shit from the Nazis and they ain’t gonna take it from Trump. They’ve been around a lot longer than the USA.

appalachiablue

(43,343 posts)
3. Looks good, thanks. Also, "NUMBER 24" Norwegian Resistance in WW2 on Netflix:
Sat Jan 25, 2025, 03:24 AM
Saturday

"Number 24," Action ‧ 2025 Robert Daniels
Jan. 1, 2025, Roger Ebert Movie Review

Based on the real-life story of World War II resistance fighter Gunnar Sønsteby, Norwegian director John Andreas Andersen’s “Number 24” is a sturdy, handsomely mounted period piece depicting the emotional toll required for freedom. It begins with an elderly Sønsteby (Erik Hivju) preparing to speak to a group of young students in Rjukan.

Andersen’s observational camera takes a documentary approach, leaning on evocative zooms to capture a nervous Sønsteby anxiously biting down on a stick before appearing on stage. He has given this speech many times, but it’s clear the accessing of these difficult memories — “the fifth drawer in his mind” as he calls it — still causes him immeasurable distress.

The framing device for “Number 24” is obvious but no less effective: Through Sønsteby’s lecture we jump back and forth from his presentation to his memories. We leap backwards to 1937 Rjukan. Sønsteby (Sjur Vatne Brean) is hiking in the mountains with his best friend Erling Solheim (Jakob Maanum Trulsen). Elsewhere, the Nazis are burning books, but only one of these men is frightened. Solheim believes the Nazis aren’t so bad; they’re only targeting communists. Sønsteby, as you can guess, has other thoughts on the matter. The ideological split between friends will fade into the background but will nevertheless be felt in every scene of this nerve-wracking drama.

Despite the intense tone of the film and its opening scene, the young Sønsteby is rarely flustered. He is a single-minded, meticulous planner whose quiet doggedness makes him an appealing recruit for Norway’s ragtag resistance. Sønsteby becomes part of the army, then becomes a publisher of anti-Nazi tracts, before finally finding his place as a spy code-named “Number 24.” Soon, Sønsteby’s high-profile missions put him in the crosshairs of the Nazis...
https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/number-24-movie-review

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