Starring Elena Chebaturkina, Aleksandr Gruzdev, Damir Eldarov, Irina Savina, Ludmila Shuvalova, Michael Tikhonov, Sergei Aisman, Olga Golovanova, Rudolf Pankov
Directed by Yoshiharu Ashino
Well, that’s an interesting list of actors, isn’t it? As you might have guessed, this is a Russian film, although it was made in cooperation with a Japanese animation studio. It’s like Blade of the Phantom Master in that regard, but thankfully this time the DVD release came with the original Russian audio track, as well as the Japanese and English dubs. Too bad the video quality wasn’t quite up to snuff. Camera panning was often jerky, and at times I got a feeling that the animation was higher quality than what I was actually seeing on the screen. Clearly something about the frame rate was a bit off.
Clumsy video transfer aside, the film is very intriguing. This is probably the first Russian film I’ve ever seen, although with Japanese directing and animation it’s not going to give me much insight into Russian film technique. It’s also the only fictional tale I’ve seen about the Eastern European front in World War II. I suspect it’s a much more common theme in Russian cinema. Since I know very little about that aspect of WWII, I can’t speak to historical accuracy at all, but First Squad portrays the Russian front as a snow-covered network of trenches that looked straight out of the first World War. If nothing else, it made WWII feel fresh and new.
Sadly, her buddies from boot camp all got killed by the Germans, leaving her the only psychic soldier the Russians have left. When the Germans decide to raise an army of undead medieval knights that only people with psychic powers can kill, Nadya alone isn’t going to be enough to save the day. So the Russians decide to fight fire with fire by resurrecting Nadya’s old pals for some payback.
Unfortunately, it’s all a bit too short. The film runs about an hour long, and too many scenes felt rushed. This is especially true for those German twins that keep chasing Nadya around. The scenes always end with Nadya escaping, and they never have a good confrontation to clear up their unfinished business. That awesome blindfolded training montage felt too short as well, and I wouldn’t have minded a bit more action for the final showdown either. I feel like another half hour or so could have done this film wonders. But it’s hard to complain much when the stuff they did squeeze in is all very good.
The one thing I really can complain about is the ending. I spent the whole film waiting for Nadya to really cut loose and show what she can do. But right at the height of the action, and for no real reason at all, they decided to turn her into the damsel in distress that needs her boyfriend to rescue her. In retrospect, she gets very little action time across the whole movie. I can forgive this a bit since it obviously needed to be longer than it was, but I can’t forgive having such a badass female lead only to wuss out with a stereotypically chauvinistic ending. It was a lame way to end the film.
So while I do have a few problems with First Squad, they don’t quite outweigh the good. It’s still a fun movie if you like supernatural action films, even if it does have a disappointing ending.