Video Sources 0 Views

  • Watch traileryoutube.com
  • Source 1123movies
  • Source 2123movies
  • Source 3123movies
Just the Wind 2012 123movies

Just the Wind 2012 123movies

Feb. 15, 201298 Min.
Your rating: 0
7 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Csak a szél 2012 123movies, Full Movie Online – News quickly spreads of the murder of a Romany family in a Hungarian village. The perpetrators have escaped and nobody claims to know who might have committed the crime. For another Romany family living close by, the murder only serves to confirm their latent, carefully repressed fears. Far away in Canada the head of the family decides that his wife, children and their grandfather must join him as soon as possible. Living in fear of the racist terror that surrounds them and feeling abandoned by the silent majority, the family tries to get through the day after the attack. By nightfall when darkness descends on the village the family pushes the beds closer together than usual. Yet their hope of escaping the madness proves illusory. Based on an actual series of killings in Hungary that claimed the lives of eight people in less than a year, Bence Fliegauf portrays the pogrom-like atmosphere which breeds such violence. The camera stays hot on the heels of the protagonists, making the breathless escalation of events physically palpable..
Plot: Drawing inspiration from the death-squad murders of several Gypsy families in Hungary in 2008, director Bence Fliegauf’s chilling and unforgettable real-life horror story follows a family whose dreams of emigration and escape are suddenly, horribly destroyed.
Smart Tags: #romani #hate_crime #gypsy


Find Alternative – Csak a szél 2012, Streaming Links:

123movies | FMmovies | Putlocker | GoMovies | SolarMovie | Soap2day


Ratings:

6.5/10 Votes: 1,343
N/A | RottenTomatoes
N/A | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 11 Popularity: 1.686 | TMDB

Reviews:

From Dawn to Dusk: A Deterministic Tragedy
Benedek Fliegauf’s “Just the Wind” has divided its audience to lovers and haters. Some accuse the film for demagogy or creating black and white illusions while others praise the director’s style and social sensibility. In all its simplicity, “Just the Wind” tells what happens to a Romani family during one ordinary day: the mother works as a cleaner in two shift works, her daughter gets bored at school bench, and her son skips school, building a safe house in the woods. The only way out seems to be the father of the family who already lives in Canada. The children are anxiously waiting for them to move, although there is really no reason to believe why things would be any better on the other side of the globe.

The film begins with morning sunlight sparkling through treetops into dim space. In fact, images of dawn, fields, woods, water and dusk do reign the visual world of the film. To my mind, it is astonishing how Fliegauf has managed to make everyday realism so utterly beautiful. There is even something neo-realist in the camera-work. But as the film dazzles with its aesthetics it also horrifies with its content.

The gloomy, dark-themed mood of “Just the Wind” isn’t, however, merely due to the shadow cast on the remote village by racist murders but also a consequence of efficient sound design and long takes that are framed in a distressingly narrow fashion. With his documentary-like approach Fliegauf not only highlights the authenticity of the milieu (each scene takes place in natural setting and lighting) but also the fact that this has actually happened. In addition, the film manages to create such a tension which keeps in its grip and coerces the viewer into identifying with the bleak reality portrayed. The viewer must identify with the characters and experience, for an hour and a half, what they go through every single day. This mood which exhales misery is, at times, quite hard to bear but fortunately broken down every once in a while by lyric landscape shots which are both serene and soothing.

In the cinematographic depiction, created by hand-held camera and deliberately improvised composition, nature plays an integral role. It’s an active part of the drama, and especially the colors of green and yellow are continuously recorded to the spectator’s consciousness. As an essential element in the film’s aesthetics, nature is, however, counterpointed with architecture of degradation which enhances the emotion of the beginning of an end. People live in shattered ruins where grown-ups are practically living dead. Trash, rotten food, cast-off objects and flat coffee infiltrate through the screen to the sense organs of the viewer. In “Just the Wind” only the children are capable of brief moments of joy in this stark environment but, at the same, adult-like responsibility is constantly required.

Noteworthy is also that Fliegauf doesn’t idealize the Romani people, not to the least extent. This is not a one-sided portrayal. Fliegauf depicts a certain regression of alienation — the final stage of exclusion where people have been divided into friends and foes. After this, guns talk. In a detailed manner, the film shows how the society has itself created such conditions and furthers the worsening situation with its disregard action. Hence, the darkness of the film is directly due to social reality and the circumstances emerging from it. The film doesn’t answer nor preach. It only agitates and shows. The film asks why. As ominous elements culminate, the film begins to show its true deterministic nature: how the dark-themed drama inevitably leads to an uncompromising disaster.

Review By: ilpohirvonen
From Dawn to Dusk: A Deterministic Tragedy
Benedek Fliegauf’s “Just the Wind” has divided its audience to lovers and haters. Some accuse the film for demagogy or creating black and white illusions while others praise the director’s style and social sensibility. In all its simplicity, “Just the Wind” tells what happens to a Romani family during one ordinary day: the mother works as a cleaner in two shift works, her daughter gets bored at school bench, and her son skips school, building a safe house in the woods. The only way out seems to be the father of the family who already lives in Canada. The children are anxiously waiting for them to move, although there is really no reason to believe why things would be any better on the other side of the globe.

The film begins with morning sunlight sparkling through treetops into dim space. In fact, images of dawn, fields, woods, water and dusk do reign the visual world of the film. To my mind, it is astonishing how Fliegauf has managed to make everyday realism so utterly beautiful. There is even something neo-realist in the camera-work. But as the film dazzles with its aesthetics it also horrifies with its content.

The gloomy, dark-themed mood of “Just the Wind” isn’t, however, merely due to the shadow cast on the remote village by racist murders but also a consequence of efficient sound design and long takes that are framed in a distressingly narrow fashion. With his documentary-like approach Fliegauf not only highlights the authenticity of the milieu (each scene takes place in natural setting and lighting) but also the fact that this has actually happened. In addition, the film manages to create such a tension which keeps in its grip and coerces the viewer into identifying with the bleak reality portrayed. The viewer must identify with the characters and experience, for an hour and a half, what they go through every single day. This mood which exhales misery is, at times, quite hard to bear but fortunately broken down every once in a while by lyric landscape shots which are both serene and soothing.

In the cinematographic depiction, created by hand-held camera and deliberately improvised composition, nature plays an integral role. It’s an active part of the drama, and especially the colors of green and yellow are continuously recorded to the spectator’s consciousness. As an essential element in the film’s aesthetics, nature is, however, counterpointed with architecture of degradation which enhances the emotion of the beginning of an end. People live in shattered ruins where grown-ups are practically living dead. Trash, rotten food, cast-off objects and flat coffee infiltrate through the screen to the sense organs of the viewer. In “Just the Wind” only the children are capable of brief moments of joy in this stark environment but, at the same, adult-like responsibility is constantly required.

Noteworthy is also that Fliegauf doesn’t idealize the Romani people, not to the least extent. This is not a one-sided portrayal. Fliegauf depicts a certain regression of alienation — the final stage of exclusion where people have been divided into friends and foes. After this, guns talk. In a detailed manner, the film shows how the society has itself created such conditions and furthers the worsening situation with its disregard action. Hence, the darkness of the film is directly due to social reality and the circumstances emerging from it. The film doesn’t answer nor preach. It only agitates and shows. The film asks why. As ominous elements culminate, the film begins to show its true deterministic nature: how the dark-themed drama inevitably leads to an uncompromising disaster.

Review By: ilpohirvonen

Other Information:

Original Title Csak a szél
Release Date 2012-02-15
Release Year 2012

Original Language hu
Runtime 1 hr 35 min (95 min)
Budget 620000
Revenue 0
Status Released
Rated N/A
Genre Drama
Director Benedek Fliegauf
Writer Benedek Fliegauf
Actors Katalin Toldi, Gyöngyi Lendvai, Lajos Sárkány
Country Hungary, Germany, France
Awards 4 wins & 4 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix Dolby Digital
Aspect Ratio 1.85 : 1
Camera N/A
Laboratory N/A
Film Length N/A
Negative Format 16 mm (Fuji Super F-64D 8622, Eterna Vivid 250D 8646, Eterna 500T 8673, Reala 500D 8692)
Cinematographic Process N/A
Printed Film Format DCP (Digital Cinema Package DCP)

Just the Wind 2012 123movies
Original title Csak a szél
TMDb Rating 6.3 11 votes

Director

Cast

Similar titles

10 Things I Hate About You 1999 123movies
Devil’s Deal 2013 123movies
April Story 1998 123movies
Courageous Love 2017 123movies
War and Peace 1956 123movies
Girl with Green Eyes 1964 123movies
Charlotte’s Web 1973 123movies
Hunterrr 2015 123movies
Waiting for the Barbarians 2019 123movies
Dead Men 2018 123movies
My Dad’s a Soccer Mom 2014 123movies
Five Times Two 2004 123movies
Openloading.com: 123movies