The Unknown Soldier (2017) Here
The Unknown Soldier (2017). A review of the WW2 Finnish war film.
The clear standout is Corporal Rokka. Aho delivers a sensational performance as the cynical, authority-defying veteran whose primary motivation is returning to his farm and family.
The cast underwent a military boot camp and filmed in harsh, sub-zero conditions in Finnish forests without trailers or artificial lighting to ensure an authentic sense of exhaustion and camaraderie. The Unknown Soldier (2017)
For international audiences, the film provides a rare look at a unique corner of WWII. It navigates the moral complexities of Finland's "strange bedfellows" alliance with Nazi Germany against the USSR without falling into jingoism. It highlights a Finnish army that wasn't big on traditional discipline—soldiers would occasionally abandon positions against orders, driven by a pragmatic desire to survive rather than die for a cause. Rating: 9/10
The film's most immediate strength is its commitment to realism. Eschewing the polished heroics of many Hollywood war films, Louhimies leans into a "raw and gutsy" depiction of combat. Aho delivers a sensational performance as the cynical,
While honoring the soldiers' resilience, the film is firmly anti-war, focusing on the psychological toll and the "slow, grinding death of innocence" rather than glorifying the conflict. Characters Over Combat
The battle sequences are gritty and visceral, notably breaking a Guinness World Record for the most high explosives detonated in a single film take. It navigates the moral complexities of Finland's "strange
Aku Louhimies’ 2017 adaptation of The Unknown Soldier ( Tuntematon sotilas ) is a visceral, three-hour epic that manages to be both a sprawling historical document and an intimate psychological character study. Based on Väinö Linna’s iconic 1954 novel, it follows a Finnish machine gun company through the (1941–1944) against the Soviet Union. The Grit of Authenticity