Land of Mine ★★★★
Martin Zandvliet’s Land of Mine is unsettling from the very outset. During the credits a recurring sound becomes audible, then consuming: the sound of heavy, ragged breathing. Sergeant Carl Rasmussen, sitting in Danish army fatigues and a maroon beret, he is watching a column of grim-faced German prisoners of war. Inscrutable, he drives past soldiers, then stops and throws his jeep into reverse. He jumps from the vehicle to assault a German who is carrying a Danish flag. ‘This is not your flag. This is not your home!’ Punching the German in the face, Rasmussen screams, ‘This is my land!’
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