Here, Beneath the North Star explained

Here, Beneath the North Star
Director:Edvin Laine
Producer:Mauno Mäkelä
Starring:Aarno Sulkanen
Cinematography:Olavi Tuomi
Runtime:182 minutes
Country:Finland
Language:Finnish

Here, Beneath the North Star (Finnish: '''Täällä Pohjantähden alla''') is a 1968 Finnish drama film directed by Edvin Laine. It was entered into the 6th Moscow International Film Festival.[1] The film is based on the first two volumes of Väinö Linna's novel trilogy Under the North Star. The third volume was adapted into a film two years later under the title Akseli and Elina.

Plot

The film begins with the founding of the Koskela croft in the 1880s and tells the story of the life of the people of the fictional Pentinkulma village until about 1920. The central theme is the unstable position of crofters and their goal to improve their living conditions. The rural upper class, such as the priestly family, and the poor people, whose socio-economic status is weaker than that of crofters, also play an important role. The story of the film goes all the way to the end of the Finnish Civil War between the Red Guards (Crofters) and the Whites (Government). The battle scene depicts the Battle of Syrjäntaka.

Cast

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 6th Moscow International Film Festival (1969) . 17 December 2012 . MIFF . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130116194825/http://www.moscowfilmfestival.ru/miff34/eng/archives/?year=1969 . 16 January 2013 .