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Stalingrad

  • 1993
  • 12
  • 2 Std. 14 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,5/10
39.172
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Stalingrad (1993)
DramaWar

Die Geschichte erzählt von einer Gruppe deutscher Soldaten, von ihrem italienischen Erholungsurlaub im Sommer 1942 bis zu den gefrorenen Steppen Sowjetrusslands und endet mit der Schlacht um... Alles lesenDie Geschichte erzählt von einer Gruppe deutscher Soldaten, von ihrem italienischen Erholungsurlaub im Sommer 1942 bis zu den gefrorenen Steppen Sowjetrusslands und endet mit der Schlacht um Stalingrad.Die Geschichte erzählt von einer Gruppe deutscher Soldaten, von ihrem italienischen Erholungsurlaub im Sommer 1942 bis zu den gefrorenen Steppen Sowjetrusslands und endet mit der Schlacht um Stalingrad.

  • Regie
    • Joseph Vilsmaier
  • Drehbuch
    • Jürgen Büscher
    • Christoph Fromm
    • Johannes Heide
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Dominique Horwitz
    • Thomas Kretschmann
    • Jochen Nickel
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,5/10
    39.172
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Joseph Vilsmaier
    • Drehbuch
      • Jürgen Büscher
      • Christoph Fromm
      • Johannes Heide
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Dominique Horwitz
      • Thomas Kretschmann
      • Jochen Nickel
    • 185Benutzerrezensionen
    • 31Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 3 Gewinne & 1 Nominierung insgesamt

    Fotos64

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    Topbesetzung43

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    Dominique Horwitz
    Dominique Horwitz
    • Fritz Reiser
    Thomas Kretschmann
    Thomas Kretschmann
    • Hans von Witzland
    Jochen Nickel
    Jochen Nickel
    • Manfred Rohleder 'Rollo'
    Sebastian Rudolph
    Sebastian Rudolph
    • Gege
    Dana Vávrová
    Dana Vávrová
    • Irina
    Martin Benrath
    Martin Benrath
    • General Hentz
    Sylvester Groth
    Sylvester Groth
    • Otto
    Karel Hermánek
    Karel Hermánek
    • Hauptmann Musk
    Heinz Emigholz
    Heinz Emigholz
    • Edgar
    Ferdinand Schuster
    • Double Edgar
    Oliver Broumis
    Oliver Broumis
    • HGM
    Dieter Okras
    • Hauptmann Haller
    Zdenek Vencl
    • Wölk
    Mark Kuhn
    • Pflüger
    Thorsten Bolloff
    • Feldmann
    Alexander Wachholz
    • Pfarrer Renner
    • (as Eckhardt A. Wachholz)
    J. Alfred Mehnert
    • Lupo
    Ulrike Arnold
    • Viola
    • Regie
      • Joseph Vilsmaier
    • Drehbuch
      • Jürgen Büscher
      • Christoph Fromm
      • Johannes Heide
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen185

    7,539.1K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    9countryway_48864

    A harrowing tale of young men being betrayed and slaughtered

    This film affected me on many emotional levels. I saw the results of the war in East and West Berlin in 1957. While in Berlin I lived with a girl my age who lost her father in the battle for Stalingrad. Her tales made my hair stand on end as he was one of the many young Germans send there to fight as a punishment for errors,(read that as failure to win), in other battle zones.

    It isn't well understood, but the Eastern Front was used as a threat and as a punishment by Hitler. Even Schindler in the film Schindler's List used that threat on the train station in order to get his bookkeeper released from the death train.

    There are two scenes that will haunt be for the rest of my life:

    The scene where Lt. Hans von Witzland, played by a very young and splendid Thomas Kretschmann, and the Russian actress Dana Vavrova who plays Irina.

    That scene is so emotionally charged that it left both actors physically shaking. I can't imagine having to repeat that scene more than once. To have to hold that raw, totally exposed feeling/expression and body language while lights are adjusted and a different angle is used must have been physically and mentally exhausting for these two brilliant actors. They perform a brutal Dance Macabre that is both horrific and fascinating.

    This scene is no longer about an enemy and the one who has been conquered. It is about a young man desperate to find one moment of humanity on an endless nightmare and a young woman who hates him and herself and yet can not resolve her situation. That he is a German and she is Russian is not as important as that they are both souls in torment with no way out.

    The human agony of that scene is superior to anything I have seen in over 60 years of watching movies.

    The other is the final scene between Dominique Horwitz and Kretschmann as Fritz and Hans clinging to each other overwhelmed and miniaturized by the vast Russian winter.

    That final scene reminds me of Napoleon's death march from Moscow in 1812. The results were to same. No enemy can come marching into Russia and live to march out again.

    I began watching this film firmly committed to cheering the Russians and hating the Germans.

    By the end I was crying for them all.

    That is the message of this fine film. War is a waste...a waste of human lives, of property, and of moral and religious focus.

    This is a classic anti-war film not unlike All Quiet on the Western Front or What Price Glory.
    10ItemCo16527

    Brutal, heartbreaking, & realistic portrayal of the bloodiest battle ever fought.

    I first saw Stalingrad about 7 years ago and to this day it still hits me as hard as the first time I watched it. It is the story of Leutnant von Witzland, Unteroffizier Rohleder, Obergefreiter Reiser, and Oberschütze Müller and their desperate fight for survival in the deadliest battle in the history of war: STALINGRAD. The film starts off in Italy in the summer of 1942 where their platoon is resting following heavy combat in North Africa. Soon they are on a train heading for the Eastern Front. The men of 1st Platoon laugh and joke, play games, write letters home, and enjoy the view of western Russia as they head for the Ukraine. This is as light-hearted as the film gets. What follows is a very accurate and graphic portrayal of the infamous battle. It pulls no punches. It's main antagonist is Hauptmann Haller, a field police officer who thinks nothing of allowing his men to abuse and murder Russian and Ukrainian prisoners. At one point he lines up a group of civilians and has them shot saying they were partisans.

    The combat scenes themselves are even more horrific. In one scene a German soldier hits a Russian over the head with a shovel as the Russian is trying to kill Ltn. von Witzland. In another scene a German soldier is cut in half by a Russian tank shell. There are many other gruesome scenes in the film, but they are necessary. The world has to see what happened in the Battle of Stalingrad. To see its brutality. To have its heart broken at the horrendous waste of the soldiers' lives. Over 2 million people lost there lives. Only 6000 of Field Marshal Paulus' 250,000-man 6th Army survived the battle. As with the battle, the film itself does not have a happy ending. And that's the way it should be. And as you watch this film, remember one thing, not every German soldier who fought in the war was a criminal. They were mostly decent people caught up in events well beyond their control.
    9ChuckStraub

    Very graphic and brutally honest. A must see.

    Stalingrad should be ranked right up there among the top World War II movies ever made. I can't say it's the best but it certainly is a great film and is under rated in its importance. What the movie is about is simple. It shows the German soldiers war on the Russian front, in Stalingrad from the point of view of a few German soldiers. It should not be viewed with the intentions of seeing the battle of Stalingrad or any strategic view of the Russian Front. This is from the eyes of a select few. You won't see the broad picture. Just like the average soldier doesn't see it. He knows and sees the part of the war that is directly around him. That is his world and that is how you will see it. It's often very graphic and brutally honest in its depictions. The cold and the feeling of hopelessness were excellently portrayed. You could just feel it. I did have one major problem with the German English barrier. I watched this on DVD. It was dubbed in English and I chose to also play it with English subtitles. I started to see that frequently the subtitles and the dubbing were different. That was annoying hearing one thing and reading different words for the same lines. I soon shut off the subtitles and started watching it over again from the beginning without the subtitles. I have no idea if the subtitles or the dubbing was the more accurate translation. I'm very glad I viewed this film and I'm sure that I will watch it a second time. Highly recommended. A must see for the historian and war movie fan.
    8prunders

    Stalingrad

    This is a film that I keep coming back to, for a variety of reasons. As a testament to the suffering of the ordinary soldier on the Eastern Front in the Second World War, it is a powerful one. There are a number of very powerful scenes in the film which help to capture the horror of war, such as the tank battle for instance. Furthermore, from what I can see the experiences documented in the film are by and large 'true' - if you read A. Beevor's book 'Stalingrad' you will know what I mean. The film is also successful in the sense that it doesn't allow character or plot to dominate it - it is simply a tale of survival, that attempts to depict the battle mainly from the ordinary (German) soldier's point of view. I've read somewhere that the original screenplay had to be toned down, which doesn't surprise me at all - if they tried to really show what the battle was like, it would have been almost impossible to make I'm sure. Even so, there are still some moments that are difficult to watch - this was made before Private Ryan but is possibly even harder-hitting in places. Just one word of caution - don't buy the dubbed 'English' version, it's pretty awful and spoils the film - try to get a copy in the original (German) version with English subtitles, it's far more powerful. You may need to buy a Region 1 DVD of the film in this case, as I did.
    8raymond-15

    An epic drama that impresses

    There can be no real victors in war if we value human life at all. That so many German and Russian boys should die in the snow-bound wilderness around Stalingrad is a tragedy beyond comprehension. The camera crew did a great job in bringing to the screen the vastness of Russia with soldiers camouflaged in white struggling on the point of death across frozen landscapes. Far from home and missing their loved ones the German soldiers are depicted as rough diamonds with kind hearts sharing their last crust of bread with starving Russian children. The over-all German plan is to take certain cities important in the flow of oil and supply of food to the Russian enemy, but their plans are thwarted when the Russian armies encircle them. The close fighting is well filmed with lots of explosions, flames and shattered bodies among fallen masonry. I liked particularly the contrast of the opening scenes in sunny Porto Cervo (where the Germans are celebrating their recent victories) with the tragic scenes which followed when calamity overtakes them.I thought too that the three struggling figures exhausted in defeat symbolised the horrific loss of human life and the futility of war. While none of the actors shone above the others, their characterisations were adequate enough though I got somewhat confused with such a large cast and all the same uniforms. The lasting impression is not with individual performances but with the over-all mood of this tragic event captured superbly under expert direction. One soldier says to another:"This will give us the Iron Cross" The reply:"Yes...it will look good on your coffin!"

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Christoph Fromm wrote the original screenplay. The producers disagreed with his more realistic direction. They had it rewritten, and Fromm took his name off the film.
    • Patzer
      Towards the end of film a Ju52 drops a single supply parachute. When dropped out of the plane and falling towards ground, it is green, when they recover it on the ground it is white. (In reality the Luftwaffe was first using white parachutes until they realized it is too difficult to spot white parachutes on the snowy ground.)
    • Zitate

      Lt. Hans von Witzland: The best thing about the cold is...

      [Witzland dies]

      Fritz Reiser: [holding the body, he laughs] You don't have to worry about sunburn. Ever been to the desert? You'd hate it. It's so hot, you're always sweating. You think you're melting, like butter. The desert is shit. Except for the stars. They're so close, you know?

      [dies]

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in The 100 Greatest War Films (2005)
    • Soundtracks
      Heimat, Deine Sterne
      Lyrics by Erich Knauf and music by Werner Bochmann

      Performed by Wilhelm Strienz

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 21. Januar 1993 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Deutschland
    • Sprachen
      • Deutsch
      • Russisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Trận Chiến Stalingrad
    • Drehorte
      • Kemijärvi, Finnland
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • B.A. Produktion
      • Bavaria Film
      • Perathon Film-und Fernsehproduktions GmbH
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 20.000.000 DM (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 152.972 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 10.882 $
      • 29. Mai 1995
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 152.972 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      2 Stunden 14 Minuten
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby SR
      • Dolby Digital
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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