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The North Star

  • 1943
  • Approved
  • 1 Std. 48 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,9/10
1973
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Dana Andrews and Anne Baxter in The North Star (1943)
DramaKriegRomanze

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA Ukrainian village must suddenly contend with the German invasion of June 1941.A Ukrainian village must suddenly contend with the German invasion of June 1941.A Ukrainian village must suddenly contend with the German invasion of June 1941.

  • Regie
    • Lewis Milestone
  • Drehbuch
    • Lillian Hellman
    • Burt Beck
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Anne Baxter
    • Dana Andrews
    • Walter Huston
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    5,9/10
    1973
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Lewis Milestone
    • Drehbuch
      • Lillian Hellman
      • Burt Beck
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Anne Baxter
      • Dana Andrews
      • Walter Huston
    • 59Benutzerrezensionen
    • 16Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Für 6 Oscars nominiert
      • 6 Gewinne & 6 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Fotos22

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    Topbesetzung79

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    Anne Baxter
    Anne Baxter
    • Marina Pavlov
    Dana Andrews
    Dana Andrews
    • Kolya Simonov
    Walter Huston
    Walter Huston
    • Dr. Kurin
    Walter Brennan
    Walter Brennan
    • Karp
    Ann Harding
    Ann Harding
    • Sophia Pavlov
    Jane Withers
    Jane Withers
    • Clavdia Kurin
    Farley Granger
    Farley Granger
    • Damian Simonov
    Erich von Stroheim
    Erich von Stroheim
    • Dr. von Harden
    Dean Jagger
    Dean Jagger
    • Rodion Pavlov
    Eric Roberts
    Eric Roberts
    • Grisha Kurin
    Carl Benton Reid
    Carl Benton Reid
    • Boris Simonov
    Ann Carter
    Ann Carter
    • Olga Pavlov
    Esther Dale
    Esther Dale
    • Anna Kurin
    Ruth Nelson
    Ruth Nelson
    • Nadya Simonov
    Paul Guilfoyle
    Paul Guilfoyle
    • Iakin
    Martin Kosleck
    Martin Kosleck
    • Dr. Richter
    Tonio Selwart
    Tonio Selwart
    • German Captain
    Peter Pohlenz
    • German Lieutenant
    • Regie
      • Lewis Milestone
    • Drehbuch
      • Lillian Hellman
      • Burt Beck
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen59

    5,91.9K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    Snow Leopard

    Pretty Interesting, for A New Set Of Reasons Now

    In its time, this probably fulfilled its desired purpose reasonably well, with a fine cast and some effective scenes depicting the suffering caused by Nazi troops. It is probably more interesting now, when it can be viewed with more objectivity, and when it is interesting for a new set of reasons. Its depiction of life in the Soviet Union is a revealing statement about the priorities of its time. The actual movie and story, viewed apart from any and all political issues, work quite well at times, while falling short at others.

    The first part of the story simply dwells on the daily lives of the residents of a Ukrainian farm town. This part is quite slow, and would be of little interest except for the sharp change of tone that comes with the Nazi attack. As banal as the lives of the villagers may have seemed, they certainly did nothing to deserve the suffering they bore as a result of the invasion. Things pick up dramatically in the second part, and at the same time the characters come more sharply into focus.

    Naturally, the scenario is more fiction than fact, especially in its idyllic depiction of life under Stalin's rule. More than anything else, this reflects the urgent desire of the US Government (whose hand was supposedly quite active in the production) to promote full-fledged public support for working with the Soviet Union against the Axis. Like the majority of features in any era that address a then-contemporary issue, it looks much different when viewed years afterward. The truth about both Stalin and Hitler is much easier for us now to determine than it was for the movie's original viewers.

    The cast helps considerably in making it work on a dramatic level. Experienced stars like Walter Huston and Walter Brennan combine with then-young performers like Anne Baxter, Farley Granger, and others to create a generally interesting set of characters. Jane Withers also has a good role, as a hapless but often endearing young woman who is desperate to help. Lillian Hellman brought her considerable reputation to the screenplay, although this kind of material is not really her strength. Lewis Milestone shows his steady hand in the battle sequences.

    Because the cast, director, and writer all add their weight to the production, this works well enough as a fictional drama as long as you set aside what you thought or think about the USSR. As history, the story is not reliable, but the movie itself is interesting as one of the more earnest attempts of its day to use cinema to influence public opinion.
    7donnajcarroll

    Well made, well acted movie.

    I saw "The North Star" when I was a child of 6 or 7 and it made a lasting impression on me. I believe older cousins took me to see it while they were baby sitting. I will say without hesitation that it was not intended as a movie for children and that is as true today as it was in 1943. For years I could vividly remember scenes from the movie but did not remember the title. I happened to see it on TV by pure chance late one night during the '70s. I think it was about halfway through the film before I realized what I was watching, but from there on everything was as I remembered it.

    It might correctly be labeled a propaganda film as it was made during a time when we were engaged in WWII. Germany was our enemy and Russia was our ally. As the saying goes, "war makes strange bed fellows." The Nazi war machine is depicted as evil and Russians are shown as innocent victims. Both are indisputable facts. The purpose of the film may have been to propagandize just how evil we believed the Nazis to be but we see films like that all the time. One example, "Empire of the Sun" (1987), a very fine film by Steven Spielberg. That was also an evil empire. Its not considered propaganda now because the war is long over. Its "art." Some might consider "JFK" as a lot of propaganda. Oliver Stone considers it "art".

    If one is interested in films of historical periods, such as WWII, this might certainly be a film of interest.
    lawprof

    Hollywood, Propaganda and Cockeyed History

    Director Lewis Milestone's "The North Star" shouldn't be viewed in embarrassed silence: it's a snapshot of a bleak period in World War II when Hollywood catered to the government's policy of portraying the recently despised and then of necessity embraced Soviet government and its population as heroic, implacable anti-Nazis.

    Look at the credits: Anne Baxter, Dana Andrews, Two Walters (Huston and Brennan), Farley Granger, Dean Jagger and the aging but still chillingly evil Erich von Stroheim. And the screenplay - Lillian Hellman. Aaron Copland, the dean of American classical composers, provided a serviceable score that pales by comparison to the music that today is his contribution to the nation's music heritage.

    "The North Star" tells the story, at any rate a story, of the resistance of Ukraine villagers to the thundering German blitzkrieg that brought incredible initial success following the launching of Operation Barbarossa in June 1941. There is little historically accurate about either the portrayal of the German advance or the rapid mobilization of patriotic and death-before-submission villagers who love their land with a fierce and unquenchable patriotism. In reality very many in the invaded areas initially hoped the Germans would liberate them from malign Stalinism and only the occupier's stupid and counterproductive terrorism awakened a staunch resistance movement. But this didn't happen overnight.

    The characters are largely one-dimensional and wooden, each playing out a politically correct vision of the real events. Children are slaughtered, German doctors engage in unorthodox practices, villagers rally around men and women of strength and character.

    Obviously 1943 audiences, targets of American government efforts to persuade them of the necessity and justice of arming the Soviet Union though Lend/Lease (actually Give/Never Get Back Anything), had a different experience than I had when I last saw this film (this morning on cable TV while devouring bagels with cream cheese accompanied by ample juice libations). But "The North Star" is a window not only into the history of World War II film but also into the germination of the postwar search for Communists and fellow travelers in Hollywood. What brought kudos in '43 led to scary and destructive investigations in the late forties and early fifties. "The North Star" deserves some credit for careers later ruined, lives destroyed and the Blacklist.

    Sensing that times and tides had changed, an atrociously butchered recut of "The Dark Star" appeared in 1953 as "Armored Attack," the same film de-Sovietized. They had to cut the original from 105 minutes to a mere 82 to "cleanse" the film of the Red Menace. It's worth watching the two versions sequentially. They showcase the impact of the Cold War on Hollywood.

    It's hard to give a rating to "The North Star." Except for the joy of seeing Von Stroheim roll out his patented dark side this is an artificially tame war film in the age of "Saving Private Ryan" and "Platoon." But as a history lesson it well rewards the time spent viewing this page from a perilous time.

    Please, if you're going to rent this film, respect the original and don't get the "colorized" version.
    6dmcslack

    Well made Hollywood propaganda

    The North Star is at least as good a propaganda movie as much of Hollywood's wartime output and the astonishing range of talent that helped in its making makes it important rather than brilliant. While not impossible, it would be difficult for this collection of top drawer movie makers to devise a real dog of a production and even the most rabid anti-commie could not put this movie into the same bag as say 'Hitler, Dead of Alive' or 'The menace of the rising sun'. The North Star was multi Oscar nominated and even factoring in the mores of the period, this cannot be dismissed entirely.

    Reading the posts on the movie here, it appears to me that some commentators really miss the whole point of US propaganda at the time and condemn The North Star out of context. These responses suggest to me that The North Star's punch has lost none of its original power.
    6ma-cortes

    Patriotic Hollywood movie about a Soviet Union village invaded by Nazis

    The picture is set during Nazi invasion, on June 22, 1941, the Fuehrer sent his war machine crashing across the frontiers of the USSR , unleashing a furious Bltzkrieg. The Fuehrer,-known his hatred for Bolshevism-, described the assault on Russia as a crusade against communism, but he obviously was motived by a need for wheat, oil, and mineral supplies to enable him to defy the British blockade. This is flag-waving and propaganda film but at the time US and USSR were allied, it deals about an idyllic Soviet village. The first part describes life of a little town, a pacific village with good people, singing, dancing and living happily. When Nokya(Dana Andrews) and young villagers(Anne Baxter, Farley Granger, Jane Withers) go to Kiev are picked up by an old countryman(Walter Brennan). While they're singing and amusing themselves, then happen a Nazi invasion and they're bombed.The second part is quite starkly moving developing account of deeds that befall about the villagers and when they go into action.

    The interesting film is a gripping war story with valiant villagers facing on Nazis.This unnerving epic depicts the horror war as Nazi atrocities and as the resistance fighters roam the Russian countryside attacking during the invasion. Although melodramatic moments in overall effects, also has moments of astounding power with some overwhelming sequences. Thought-provoking screenplay amid much feuding writer Lillian Hellman and producer/director , and Hellman told her disappointment on the adaptation. The credits are extraordinaries, prestigious actors, Walter Huston as the village medic, Dana Andrews, Farley Granger in his first role along with Anne Baxter, Erich Von Stroheim as usual official Nazi, Dean Jagger, among them.Cinematography supplied by the master James Wong Howe and score by the classic Aaron Copland with lyrics by Ira Gershwin.

    The motion picture is well directed by Lewis Milestone, he was born in the Ukraine(where is set the movie), but emigrated to America at 18 and he served in WWI. He often made chronicles of wartime conflicts and persisted in showing horror war from the point of view of the ordinary soldier. As he showed WWI(All quiet on the western front), WWII(A walk in the sun,Purple heart, Halls of Motzuma,Edge and darkness) and Korean war(Pork Chop Hill); and directed several other excellent movies in different fields, drama(Of mice and men, Strange love of Martha Ivers), adventures(Mutiny on the Bounty) and heist-comedy(Ocean's eleven), among others.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Film debut of Farley Granger.
    • Patzer
      Walter Brennan and Farley Granger ambush 3 German soldiers, as one is about to throw a grenade he drops it but it doesn't go off.
    • Zitate

      Dr. von Harden: [while Dr. Kurin is holding a gun on Richter and von Harden] I do not like much of what I've done for the past nine years.

      Dr. Pavel Grigorich Kurin: [after von Harden has given a blood transfusion from a Russian child to a German soldier] You do not like bleeding children?

      Dr. von Harden: Did the boy die?

      Dr. Pavel Grigorich Kurin: [Contemtuously] You knew he would die!

      Dr. von Harden: They took too much blood. I'm sorry for that.

      Dr. Pavel Grigorich Kurin: Yes, I nelieve you when you say you are sorry.

      Dr. von Harden: I'm sorry for many things, Dr. Kurin. Most of all that this is not the world we used to know.

      Dr. Pavel Grigorich Kurin: I've heard about you... civilized men who are sorry. This...

      [Contemptuously gesturing toward Richter]

      Dr. Pavel Grigorich Kurin: This kind is nothing! They will go when their bosses go, but men like you who have contempt for men like him! To me you are the real filth... men who do the work of Facists while they pretend to themselves that they are better than the beasts for whom they work... men who do murder while they laugh at them who order them to do it. It is men like you who have sold their people to men like him.

      [He points to Richter and shoots him at point blank range]

      Dr. Pavel Grigorich Kurin: You see, Dr. von Harden, you were wrong about many things. I AM a man who kills!

      [He shoots von Harden at point blank range too]

    • Alternative Versionen
      In 1956, the film was sold to television and re-edited under the title "Armored Attack." 25 minutes were removed, including all references to the word "comrade," and with the help of voice-over narrations, turned the alleged pro-Communist piece into anti-Communist territory.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Sprockets: Masters of Menace (1995)
    • Soundtracks
      Song of the Fatherland
      (uncredited)

      Music by Aaron Copland

      Lyrics by Ira Gershwin

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 4. März 1944 (Mexiko)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Deutsch
      • Russisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Estrella norteña
    • Drehorte
      • Samuel Goldwyn Studios - 7200 Santa Monica Boulevard, West Hollywood, Kalifornien, USA(Studio)
    • Produktionsfirma
      • The Samuel Goldwyn Company
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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 48 Minuten
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    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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