Flyora is the teenage boy (Aleksei Kravchenko), joining the Belarusian partisans who arrive to pick him up despite objections from his mother (she is so distraught that she tells her son to kill her and the twin girls). Flyora is off with the partisans and once their mission is set, the kid is left behind with an older partisan who gives up his worn-out boots for the kid to wear. While crying over not being part of the militia, he finds Glasha (Olga Mironova), a partisan nurse, who was also left behind. They laugh at each other and then there is a sudden bombing campaign with paratroopers deployed from the sky. Things only worsen when Flyora leaves with Glasha back to his home only to find everyone is dead - Flyora doesn't see the pile of corpses bu Glasha does as he strains to find his family in the thick muddy swamp. They both let out cries that shatter us emotionally and the soundtrack, which is oppressive itself, seem to cry for them and warn them at the same time. More nightmarish events are unfolding, one worse than the next.
This is a profane war sometimes told from Flyora's point-of-view, and often we get startling close-up images of Flyora looking straight at us, the viewer. There are dark, muddied images that will pierce your soul here such as the Germans holding Flyora at gunpoint for a picture; the church burning sequence that is agonizing to watch (a little sardonic humor is thrown here when one of the SS brigade officers almost gets trapped with the Russians in the church); the relentless gunfire overhead that nearly kills Flyora, kills a cow and another partisan; the effigy of Hitler left standing in the middle of the road; the Nazi generals who don't want to look at Flyora who gets out of the church alive, and so on. There is one scene of Flyora and Glasha shaking the trees to receive some rain water as they bathe themselves - the only joyous scene complete with a rainbow forming in the woods. But there is one scene of Flyora, who looks like he has aged 10 years in the midst of battle and deeply unsettling situations, pointing a rifle at a picture of Hitler that is one of the most chilling scenes of any antiwar film in history. It may feel like it has go on for a little too long until you reach the climactic point.
Shrewdly directed with an uncompromising vision by Elem Klimov (his last film) thanks to screenwriter Ales Adamovich who was an actual child soldier with the Belarus partisans in WWII, "Come and See" is war as reality from the perspective of those who are living in villages and farms. It also show the grim reality of war as an inevitability, with all the ugliness of immoral actions from the enemies. Kravchenko's pained, agonizing and horrified face says it all - it is the very soul of war as an immoral action.







