Watched: 02/11/2026
Format: Prime
Viewing: First
Director: Jalmari Helander
My mother's parents were both from Finland.* So, growing up, I heard and saw the word "sisu" here and there. Occasionally I'd see it printed on something, and upon trying to understand what it was, never really put it together. It's funny, because Sisu (2022) starts by saying the term is "untranslatable", and then spends the runtime of the movie showing instead of telling. And if you still don't get it by movie's end, ain't no one going to be able to help you.
It will not hurt to Google "Finland in WWII" for a quick synopsis of the rotten position Finland was in before, during and after WWII. As a nation bordering the Soviet Union, who had tried to claim Finland almost immediately after the Communist take-over, After The Winter War of 1939-1940, Finland lost swaths of land but was not annexed. Finland sided with the Nazis for several years of the war against the USSR, seeing an alliance as a chance to get the land back.
In the end, they switched teams, forming an alliance with the Soviets and purging the Nazis from Finland (especially Lapland).
But that's just the backdrop.
The movie is extraordinarily simple. A former Finnish soldier, who lost everything (family, home, etc...) during the war with the USSR, has turned his back on people and World War II raging around him. During the war, he was known as "The Immortal" - seemingly unstoppable and unkillable, and racking up a massive body count. While war rages around him, he's out in Lapland digging for gold and hanging with his dog.
While riding his horse back to civilization with a coupleof bags of gold, he passes Nazis going back to Germany, the tail end of the Nazi occupation, and leaving with everything behind them burning. Being Nazis, they begin to mess with our hero, and... then it's mostly a Tom and Jerry cartoon, with Aatami (Jorma Tommila) - aka: The Immortal - killing a whole lot of Nazis and liberating a truckload of comfort women, who are happy to join in on this revenge thing.
It falls in line with a John Wick sort of movie, where a plot is a pretext for action sequences, and the stakes never really get higher or lower than survival on either side. And, as this movie is 85% blowing up National Socialists, it's hard to dislike.
The "sisu" in question is Aatami's drive to wipe the map of every last one of these bastards, paired with his endurance to withstand their assaults.
I was a big fan of Rare Exports when I finally saw it, and Jalmari Helander, the writer/director here, is the same brain behind this movie and its sequel. He knows how to do *a lot* with what he has on hand - like... Lapland. He also isn't afraid to swing for the fences with extremes, making most horror movies look tame in comparison to the havoc wrought by Aatami.
The movie is a bit of a cathartic cartoon, and that's okay. If the worst thing that happens out of this is we all learn the word "sisu" and embrace the concept, we're none the worse off.
*my grandfather was actually from the border of Finland and Sweden and spoke only Swedish until he immigrated to the U.S. and landed in a Finnish community. In the US he learned both Finnish and English. And married my Finnish grandmother. It's also worth noting, my mother was a very late addition to the family, and my grandparents were born between 1898 and 1908, so everything was very old school with them.





.jpg)
.png)


