IMDb-BEWERTUNG
8,2/10
39.922
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Ein Dokumentarfilm über den Ersten Weltkrieg mit nie zuvor gesehenen Aufnahmen zum 100. Jahrestag des Kriegsendes.Ein Dokumentarfilm über den Ersten Weltkrieg mit nie zuvor gesehenen Aufnahmen zum 100. Jahrestag des Kriegsendes.Ein Dokumentarfilm über den Ersten Weltkrieg mit nie zuvor gesehenen Aufnahmen zum 100. Jahrestag des Kriegsendes.
- Nominiert für 1 BAFTA Award
- 6 Gewinne & 14 Nominierungen insgesamt
Thomas Adlam
- Self - Bedfordshire Regiment
- (Synchronisation)
- (as Capt Thomas Adlam VC)
William Argent
- Self - Royal Naval Air Service
- (Synchronisation)
- (as LM William Argent)
John Ashby
- Self - The Duke of Cambridge's Own (Middlesex Regiment)
- (Synchronisation)
- (as Cpl John Ashby)
Attwood
- Self - British Army
- (Synchronisation)
- (as Cpl Attwood)
Walter Aust
- Self - East Yorkshire Regiment
- (Synchronisation)
- (as Pte Walter Aust)
Donald Bain
- Self - Seaforth Highlanders
- (Synchronisation)
- (as Pte Donald Bain)
Thomas Baker
- Self - Chatham Battalion, Royal Naval Division
- (Synchronisation)
- (as Pte Thomas Baker)
George Banton
- Self - 50th Division Headquarters
- (Synchronisation)
- (as Sig George Banton)
Walter Becklake
- Self - Northhampyonshire Yeomanry
- (Synchronisation)
- (as L Cpl Walter Becklake MM)
Arthur Beeton
- Self - Royal Navy Air Service
- (Synchronisation)
- (as POM Arthur Beeton)
Robert Bell
- Self - British Army
- (Synchronisation)
- (as Mr Robert Bell)
William Benham
- Self - Hawke Battalion, Royal Navy Division
- (Synchronisation)
- (as Sub Lt William Benham)
Joseph Biglin
- Self - Durham Light Infantry
- (Synchronisation)
- (as Pte Joseph Biglin)
Edwin Bigwood
- Self - Worcestershire Regiment
- (Synchronisation)
- (as Pte Edwin Bigwood)
Horace Birks
- Self - Tanks Corps
- (Synchronisation)
- (as Capt Horace Birks)
Edmund Blunden
- Self - Royal Sussex Regiment
- (Synchronisation)
- (as Lt Edmund Blunden MC)
Clarence Bourne
- Self - Army Service Corps
- (Synchronisation)
- (as S Sgt Clarence Bourne)
Allan Bray
- Self - The Duke of Edinburgh's ((Whiltshire Regiment))
- (Synchronisation)
- (as L Cpl Allan Bray)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
10mattwidd
I was lucky enough to bag a ticket to the one off showing of Peter Jackson's They Shall Not Grow Old, having watched a lot of World War One documentaries and made countless visits to historic sites across France and Belgium I was keen to see what was being marketed as a 'new' perspective on The Great War, it did not disappoint.
Jackson chose to create a narrow focus narrative for this 1 hour 30 minute documentary to allow the viewer to delve into the fine details often missed in more sweeping documentaries trying to cover all aspects and areas of the conflict. Jackson chose to look closely at the lives and experiences of British native frontline troops in Belgium. The documentary follows a linear timeline beginning with the breakout of war and the initial volunteering of thousands of young men excited and ready for an adventure for King and Country and ends with the great sense of loss and uncertainty of the future the troops had by the end of the war.
The entire documentary is narrated by records of surviving troops recorded in the 60s and 70s, this was an intentional move by Jackson that definitely adds to the ability for the viewer to connect and relate to the survivors.
I especially found the stories and anecdotes about the goings on behind the lines during down time and R&R for the troops captivating as it is often over looked in other documentaries solely concentrating on the combat and horrors of war.
The pain staking effort and lengths Jackson and his team went to to restore this footage not only with colour but with frame rate, sharpness and especially sound is breath taking. Taking the time to have professional lip readers painstakingly review all the footage so allow us to then know and hear what was being said truly brought the footage to life.
My only issue with the film, something that is made note of by Jackson is of course because of the time in history and available cameras there is no actual combat footage available so you do spend a large amount of time just watching still hand drawn cartoons of the battles from the time, something that cannot be avoided but does detract from the immersion the rest of the film creates.
I highly recommend this film to everyone, it is important we see the true perspective of what our ancestors went through and never forget these brave men and women.
As this historically important anniversary draws to a close, I just want to say that my viewing of this film was that of utter amazement. As a photo colouriser/restorer, I was absolutely astonished at the work PJ's team put into this. The transition from the original film material, then to the stabilised and corrected FPS and then the full colour and sound was one of the most spectacular things I have ever seen on the screen. The colour is natural and really helps emphasise the grittiness of war and brings out hidden details that may have been missed in the B&W source. Usually I prefer film not to be tampered with, but as Jackson says, this is how the men saw it - in living colour. The addition of the voiceovers from the surviving soldiers themselves is a great choice and doesn't distract and flows along nicely with the visuals. Throughout I expressed various emotions of sadness and shock, but surprisingly a few laughs, particularly one shot showing a soldier banging a tune on another soldiers helmet as they march.
I do wish I had seen this on the big screen and I imagine what I have said is enhanced 100x more with that type of viewing. A fitting tribute to the men that did and didn't come home and I hope it is recognised and picks up many awards.
I needed some time for this to sink in before commenting on it. This was equal parts funny, exciting, moving, harrowing, horrifying, upsetting.
Firstly, it's not a glossy documentary. There are some harrowing scenes in this that will, and should, upset you.
The first 25 minutes are of original black and white, speeded up footage with the original voices of troops telling their story over the top of it.
Then something amazing happens. The screen widens, the footage smoothes out, the colours shines through and in an instant your and seeing everything in so much more detail.
That said this was the first time I've seen footage from The Great War that didn't feel disconnected. It feels real. Seeing the colour on their cheeks and eyes, the dirt, the mud, the blood brings the old footage to life. Occasionally the colourisation takes on a slightly animated feel but never enough to draw you out of the engrossing scenes laid out before you.
Then the frame rate adjustment is amazing. Having computers generate the missing frames to adjust the variable 15-18fps to the regular 24fps is a visual butter knife that smoothes out the jerky footage.
Having the soldiers talk sounds like a mistake but it's done in such a subtle and sensitive way it never feels false. They've been lip synced perfectly and apparently even with the right accent for the infantry units depicted.
This was powerful viewing. Computers and technology being used for something so important, to allow 100+ year old footage to look so modern and yet not feel sanitised is amazing.
This should become compulsory viewing for every one, all schools too.
With footage thats this accessible there's no reason history should be forgotten.
Firstly, it's not a glossy documentary. There are some harrowing scenes in this that will, and should, upset you.
The first 25 minutes are of original black and white, speeded up footage with the original voices of troops telling their story over the top of it.
Then something amazing happens. The screen widens, the footage smoothes out, the colours shines through and in an instant your and seeing everything in so much more detail.
That said this was the first time I've seen footage from The Great War that didn't feel disconnected. It feels real. Seeing the colour on their cheeks and eyes, the dirt, the mud, the blood brings the old footage to life. Occasionally the colourisation takes on a slightly animated feel but never enough to draw you out of the engrossing scenes laid out before you.
Then the frame rate adjustment is amazing. Having computers generate the missing frames to adjust the variable 15-18fps to the regular 24fps is a visual butter knife that smoothes out the jerky footage.
Having the soldiers talk sounds like a mistake but it's done in such a subtle and sensitive way it never feels false. They've been lip synced perfectly and apparently even with the right accent for the infantry units depicted.
This was powerful viewing. Computers and technology being used for something so important, to allow 100+ year old footage to look so modern and yet not feel sanitised is amazing.
This should become compulsory viewing for every one, all schools too.
With footage thats this accessible there's no reason history should be forgotten.
It's only October and I have already seen two Oscar winning films. This (for best documentary) and A star is Born for loads of things.
Months ago I bought a ticket for this special live (3D) screening of this BFI film from the London Film Festival featuring a post film interview between Peter Jackson (the most modest man in cinema) and Mark Kermode (the most adulatory)
I thought it would be special.
It was more than that.
It was a landmark.
It was actually a significant night in cinematic history, because what Peter Jackson has achieved here is unparalleled.
We've all seen colourised war footage. It's interesting, but in reality it's a bit pants.
This is the real deal. A step forward in technology driven by heart, emotion, passion, DNA.
In this truly remarkable documentary Jackson brings us footage from the WW1 front line trenches in a way that you can't even begin to imagine.
First he restored hours of black and white footage to remove grain, scratches, burn marks etc.
Then he graded it.
Then he fixed all the film sprockets so they don't jiggle about and blur.
Then, get this, he turned it all from a hotch-potch of 10/11/12/14/16 and 17 Frames per second into it all being 24 FPS.
This is not insignificant.
A 17 FPS film transferred to 24 frames needs to 'find' 7 frames. It needs to create them, to fill in the gaps to make film flow as we expect. How one does that I have no clue. Frankly, neither does Jackson, but he knows people who were up to it and deliver on the challenge.
So, as Jackson puts it, we don't see Charlie Chaplinesque war footage. We see dignified film of soldiers in real time as our eye would compute it. This is important because it makes it so real.
Then he, frame by frame, colourised the whole lot.
Then he put a team of lip readers onto it to work out what the soldiers were saying when they spoke to camera (in 1914-18 there was no film/sound recording).
Then he recorded both battleground sound effects, by enlisting the NZ army, and the words these soldiers were saying, through actors, and lip synched and background-noised the whole thing.
Then he launched it.
The man is a genius.
The result is beyond words incredible.
On many occasions I gasped out loud, not least when he moved from the first reel, which shows unmodified footage of the preparation of enlistees for WWI, into the reality of war.
In a stunning coup de theatre the screen changes shape.
The audiences audibly gasps.
We are in a new reality.
Now, this all makes it sound like this is simply an exercise in technological show-offery.
No. this focuses on soldiers. Poor. Young. Men.
With terrible teeth, but with opinion, with humour, with dignity, with resolute spirit.
And not just young British men.
Perhaps the most affecting part of this film is where German POW's muck in and join the Brits. It's clear that in those days this was duty and honour for one's country, absolutely NOT hatred of the enemy.
This is a truly remarkable film experience.
It's important.
Find a way of seeing it.
It's much more than a cinematic landmark.
It's a historical one, because the legacy Peter Jackson's 14-18-Now and Imperial War Museum commission gives the world is new technology that will allow all sorts of ancient film archives to become living history.
In this case the 100 minutes that are committed to film are actually backed up by a further 100 hours of monochrome footage that Jackson's team has restored (free of charge) for his commissioners.
See when international honours are handed out (I think Bono has a knighthood for example) Peter Jackson needs to be number one on the list for this real and important achievement.
I assume a further Oscar is in the bag.
Months ago I bought a ticket for this special live (3D) screening of this BFI film from the London Film Festival featuring a post film interview between Peter Jackson (the most modest man in cinema) and Mark Kermode (the most adulatory)
I thought it would be special.
It was more than that.
It was a landmark.
It was actually a significant night in cinematic history, because what Peter Jackson has achieved here is unparalleled.
We've all seen colourised war footage. It's interesting, but in reality it's a bit pants.
This is the real deal. A step forward in technology driven by heart, emotion, passion, DNA.
In this truly remarkable documentary Jackson brings us footage from the WW1 front line trenches in a way that you can't even begin to imagine.
First he restored hours of black and white footage to remove grain, scratches, burn marks etc.
Then he graded it.
Then he fixed all the film sprockets so they don't jiggle about and blur.
Then, get this, he turned it all from a hotch-potch of 10/11/12/14/16 and 17 Frames per second into it all being 24 FPS.
This is not insignificant.
A 17 FPS film transferred to 24 frames needs to 'find' 7 frames. It needs to create them, to fill in the gaps to make film flow as we expect. How one does that I have no clue. Frankly, neither does Jackson, but he knows people who were up to it and deliver on the challenge.
So, as Jackson puts it, we don't see Charlie Chaplinesque war footage. We see dignified film of soldiers in real time as our eye would compute it. This is important because it makes it so real.
Then he, frame by frame, colourised the whole lot.
Then he put a team of lip readers onto it to work out what the soldiers were saying when they spoke to camera (in 1914-18 there was no film/sound recording).
Then he recorded both battleground sound effects, by enlisting the NZ army, and the words these soldiers were saying, through actors, and lip synched and background-noised the whole thing.
Then he launched it.
The man is a genius.
The result is beyond words incredible.
On many occasions I gasped out loud, not least when he moved from the first reel, which shows unmodified footage of the preparation of enlistees for WWI, into the reality of war.
In a stunning coup de theatre the screen changes shape.
The audiences audibly gasps.
We are in a new reality.
Now, this all makes it sound like this is simply an exercise in technological show-offery.
No. this focuses on soldiers. Poor. Young. Men.
With terrible teeth, but with opinion, with humour, with dignity, with resolute spirit.
And not just young British men.
Perhaps the most affecting part of this film is where German POW's muck in and join the Brits. It's clear that in those days this was duty and honour for one's country, absolutely NOT hatred of the enemy.
This is a truly remarkable film experience.
It's important.
Find a way of seeing it.
It's much more than a cinematic landmark.
It's a historical one, because the legacy Peter Jackson's 14-18-Now and Imperial War Museum commission gives the world is new technology that will allow all sorts of ancient film archives to become living history.
In this case the 100 minutes that are committed to film are actually backed up by a further 100 hours of monochrome footage that Jackson's team has restored (free of charge) for his commissioners.
See when international honours are handed out (I think Bono has a knighthood for example) Peter Jackson needs to be number one on the list for this real and important achievement.
I assume a further Oscar is in the bag.
100 years on from the Great War we cannot pretend to know what life was like serving in the trenches. This incredible film brings us as close to experiencing it as we are ever going to get.
It is harrowing, it is poignant, it is funny. Above all else this film is heartbreaking. No punch is pulled, no attempt is made to hide the brutality of war or the hardship of the common soldier.
Quite simply this amazing documentary should be made compulsory viewing in all schools and for every soapbox, warmongering politician that would send our youth into hell.
It is harrowing, it is poignant, it is funny. Above all else this film is heartbreaking. No punch is pulled, no attempt is made to hide the brutality of war or the hardship of the common soldier.
Quite simply this amazing documentary should be made compulsory viewing in all schools and for every soapbox, warmongering politician that would send our youth into hell.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesMuch of the footage had never been seen, having sat in the vaults of London's Imperial War Museum for many years.
- PatzerSeveral shots of tanks appear in the film, both Mark V (Mark Five) and Mark V* (Mark Five Star). They have been colourised green. In reality, tanks of these types were painted "a neutral brown colour". See the article by the British Tank Museum which states that. "Surrendering to the inevitable, towards the end of 1916 it was ordered that the tanks should be painted in a 'neutral brown colour' all over." These tanks entered service in 1918, and were factory-painted brown.
- Zitate
Soldier: [waving at camera] Hi, mum.
- Crazy Credits"Filmed on location on the Western Front, 1914 to 1918"
- VerbindungenFeatured in Front Row: Folge #3.3 (2018)
Top-Auswahl
Melde dich zum Bewerten an und greife auf die Watchlist für personalisierte Empfehlungen zu.
- How long is They Shall Not Grow Old?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsländer
- Offizielle Standorte
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Вони не постаріють
- Drehorte
- Produktionsfirmen
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 17.956.913 $
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 21.656.913 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 39 Minuten
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.33 : 1(original footage)
- 1.85 : 1
Zu dieser Seite beitragen
Bearbeitung vorschlagen oder fehlenden Inhalt hinzufügen