“Land of Mine” is a Danish film (“Under Sadet”). It was written and directed by Martin Zandvliet. It was based on the aftermath of WWII in Denmark. The Germans had left millions of mines on Danish beaches to discourage an Allied invasion. After the war, the Danish government used German prisoners to discover and disarm the mines. Some of the prisoners were just teenagers. Of the 2,000 prisoners used, 149 were killed in the five months of work. The movie was filmed on some of the beaches. At one point, a live mine was uncovered during actor training. That took actor boot camp a little too far.
The
movie opens in May, 1945. Five years of German occupation has finally ended. A
group of young German prisoners are put to work locating mines. They are
overseen by a Danish Sgt. Rasmussen (Roland Moller). He is not the coddling
type. Practice diffusing a mine in a bunker begins the winnowing process and
now we have eleven. Clearly the movie is going to be a “who will survive?”
movie. As though they aren’t already in danger, some of the boys talk about
their future. Can you say “dead meat”? The work involves crawling on their
bellies on the beach using probes to find the mines. When they are not tempting
fate, they are being mistreated by Rasmussen and being ill-fed. Gradually,
Rasmussen warms to his charges, but just as he gives up his villain shirt, his
evil boss shows up. Capt. Jensen (Mikkel Folsgaard) does not plan on keeping
the promise that once they finish one last beach, they can go home.
The
cast is fine, but the characters lack development. We never find out why
Rasmussen is so belligerent. Of the Germans, only Sebastian (Louis Hofmann)
stands out. In fact, it is hard to tell the boys apart. Jensen is a cartoonish
villain. Rasmussen is more interesting and is given a roller-coaster arc. He
goes from contempt to tolerance to anger to empathy. The other characters are
mainly there to die. And the deaths are pretty predictable. Don’t talk about
the future! Not surprising, since this is a movie, 71% of the boys die.
Contrast that to the 7% who actually died in the mine disposal.
The
movie uses the mine discovery to create realistic suspense. Although you know
some will be killed and it is sometimes forshadowed, you don’t know when the
explosions will occur. While the time on the beach is edge of your seat, the
time spent in the barracks is tame. There is no dysfunction in the squad partly
because the unit is homogeneous.
The
main strength of the film is it brings a little known event to light. It is
admirable that Denmark nominated a film for the Academy Awards which does not
reflect well on the Danes. In fact, what happened to the German prisoners was a
war crime. The Geneva Convention expressly prohibits the use of prisoners to do
dangerous jobs. To make Denmark look even worse, none of the characters in the
movie deserved their fate. They are not Nazis, they are just boys. Some of the
deaths are heart-breaking. It’s a pretty bleak film.
I
have seen “Land of Mine” on several lists of the best war movies. It is
entertaining, but overrated. I do recommend it mainly for the history lesson.
Now let’s see if we get an American movie about treatment of German prisoners.
GRADE = B