| Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
| Daniel Craig | ... | Tuvia Bielski | |
| Liev Schreiber | ... | Zus Bielski | |
| Jamie Bell | ... | Asael Bielski | |
| Alexa Davalos | ... | Lilka Ticktin | |
| Allan Corduner | ... | Shimon Haretz | |
| Mark Feuerstein | ... | Isaac Malbin | |
| Tomas Arana | ... | Ben Zion Gulkowitz | |
| Jodhi May | ... | Tamara Skidelsky | |
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|
Kate Fahy | ... | Riva Reich |
| Iddo Goldberg | ... | Yitzhak Shulman | |
| Iben Hjejle | ... | Bella | |
| Martin Hancock | ... | Peretz Shorshaty | |
| Ravil Isyanov | ... | Viktor Panchenko | |
| Jacek Koman | ... | Konstanty 'Koscik' Kozlowski | |
| George MacKay | ... | Aron Bielski | |
On the run and hiding in the deep forests of the then German-occupied Poland and Belorussia (World War II), the four Bielski brothers find the impossible task of foraging for food and weapons for their survival. They live, not only with the fear of discovery, contending with neighboring Soviet partisans and knowing whom to trust but also take the responsibility of looking after a large mass of fleeing Polish Jews from the German war machine. Women, men, children, the elderly and the young alike are all hiding in makeshift homes in the dark, cold and unforgiving forests in the darkest times of German-occupied Eastern Europe. Written by Cinema_Fan
I've registered here just to write that I'm amazed by some reviews pointing that Zwick was inaccurate or illiterate when making his film. And it's really amusing to read that 'partisans couldn't speak Russian because Naliboki was a Polish town'.
Naliboki is a town in the very center of present Belarus. It's a point were cultures mixed. For many centuries everybody here mastered at least 3 languages, and elder Belski spoke 6 of them: Yiddish, Hebrew, Polish, Belarusian, Russian, German. It's not so impossible, I may assure you:)
Actually, Russian is appropriate only in episodes when Zus Belski talks to a Soviet partisans' commander - that guy was from Moscow. I'm pretty sure, that in reality Jews talked to their neighbors in Yiddish and got answers in Polish or Belarusian. As for Belskies, they where the only Jewish family in their village, so they should master Slavic languages perfectly.