"La trama sigue a un grupo de alemanes reclutados en la 1ª Guerra Mundial y de cómo pasan de idealismo a la desilusión. Como dice el personaje principal Paul Baumer (Lew Ayres): ""Vivimos en... Leer todo"La trama sigue a un grupo de alemanes reclutados en la 1ª Guerra Mundial y de cómo pasan de idealismo a la desilusión. Como dice el personaje principal Paul Baumer (Lew Ayres): ""Vivimos en las trincheras y luchamos. Tratamos de no ser asesinados, eso es todo"".""La trama sigue a un grupo de alemanes reclutados en la 1ª Guerra Mundial y de cómo pasan de idealismo a la desilusión. Como dice el personaje principal Paul Baumer (Lew Ayres): ""Vivimos en las trincheras y luchamos. Tratamos de no ser asesinados, eso es todo""."
- Director/a
- Guionistas
- Estrellas
- Ganó 2 premios Óscar
- 10 premios y 2 nominaciones en total
- Kemmerich
- (as Kemmerick)
- Behn
- (as Walter Browne Rogers)
- Tjaden
- (as 'Slim' Summerville)
- Bertinck
- (as Pat Collins)
- Frau Bäumer - Silent Version Trailer only
- (escenas eliminadas)
- 2nd Medic Orderly
- (sin acreditar)
Resumen
Reseñas destacadas
Lew Ayres is the student leader of a bunch of German school boys in 1914 who listen to the voice of their school master and enlist in the war that's just been declared. The whole class enlists and that's not hyperbole because in Germany at the time it was the boys who got the education and the girls if they got it, got it separately from the boys.
I'm sure that viewers of All Quiet on the Western Front today probably are asking why that school master and so many of his generation were urging their youth on to such folly. Very simply that their generation had a quick victory in 1870 in the Franco-Prussian War. Every generation since wars were recorded figures their war experience will be the same for their children.
Only it wasn't. On the western front the Allied and Central Powers armies were locked in a bitter stalemate that ran diagonally across France and Belgium from the English Channel to the Swiss border. This went on for a little over four years. In fact had it not been for the fact that America joined the Allied side and the French and British held out until they did, I'm sure an honest armistice would have been declared long before November 11, 1918.
You lived, fought and died in those trenches. Either you were defending or you were attacking the other guy's trenches against murderous automatic weapon fire and long distance artillery batteries. All Quiet on the Western Front was the first great war film of the American sound era and graphically shows that.
And it shows that from the enemy perspective. That's something today's audience can't appreciate, the fact that the film was from the Wilhelmine German perspective. Remember these were the enemy a dozen years before. But the experience in the trenches was universal.
Lew Ayres became a star with this film and it effected him so deeply that he became a committed pacifist which caused later problems in his career. He's the voice of reason and civilization and the voice of a lost generation of Germans who would never have listened to the demagogic appeals of the Nazis.
Louis Wolheim plays the veteran soldier who befriends Ayres and his school boy chums and teaches them how to survive in the trenches. It turned out to be his greatest role. He was a brutish looking man and played mostly those types in silent films. All Quiet on the Western Front would have been the start of a whole new career opening. But Wolheim died the following year just as he was to start filming The Front Page. Adolphe Menjou took the part of Walter Burns in that film which Wolheim was to have.
The third really stand out performance is that of John Wray who some might remember as the brutal prison guard in Each Dawn I Die. Wray plays an officious mail man who is in the German Army Reserve. He gets called up and this little nobody gets rather impressed with himself and his new found authority as a training sergeant to Ayres and his friends. Later on at the front, he gets a view of combat he wasn't quite ready for.
All Quiet on the Western Front with its eternal message of peace and life will be one eternal film, it will be shown and appreciated for many generations to come.
I love this film and strongly recommend it to anyone who considers themselves to be a film buff. Part of my love of the film is because it was made relatively shortly after the war and the uniforms, trucks, etc. all appear correct for the period. Many years later, a made for TV version of this film appeared with Ernest Borgnine and Richard Thomas. It, too, was excellent but also was perhaps a bit too polished and pretty--lacking some of the grit of the original. Great acting, direction and production all made this original THE best of the anti-war films of the 1920s and 30s.
Other similar great movies I strongly recommend are J'ACCUSE (French), WESTFRONT 1918 (German), THE BIG PARADE (USA--silent) and THE EAGLE AND THE HAWK (USA). All excel at portraying war in a truthful and non-glamorized manner--it's just a shame that their impact of the world as a whole was negligible--particularly in Germany--where Fascism would soon replace the anti-war sentiment of the book ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT. In fact, his books and this film were banned once the Nazis came to power just a few years later.
A beautiful film , for me, i admitt, the best version of the All Quiet on the Western Front, for the noble simplicity , offered first by the masterpiece of Erich Maria Remarque, but, not less, for the context of its aparition and for the echo in our time.
In short, easy to define it as gem or masterpiece or example for proper war film.
In fact, a profound honest work. It is enough for be one of memorable films.
Great World War 1 movie, made when the war was still fresh in everyone's minds.
Might well be the first anti-war war movie, as it depicts the grim realities of war, rather than the romantic, heroic non-existent version of it.
Harrowing, shocking, original, unpredictable, and just as relevant today as in 1930.
Surprisingly good production values for 1930.
Solid performances all round.
Far far better than the 1979 remake.
Oscars Best Picture Winners, Ranked
Oscars Best Picture Winners, Ranked
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesWith the loss of limbs and gory deaths shown rather explicitly, this is undoubtedly the most violent American film of its time. This is because the Production Code was not strictly enforced until 1934 and also because Universal Pictures deemed the subject matter important enough to allow the violence to be seen. The scene where a soldier grabs a strand of barbed wire and then is blown up by an artillery shell, leaving only his hands still grabbing the barbed wire, was told to director Lewis Milestone by a former German soldier working as an extra, who saw that happen during a French attack on his position during the war. Milestone used it in the film.
- PifiasWhen Paul talks to the dead soldier in the pit, the soldier is breathing visibly and at one point his eyes blink.
- Citas
Paul Bäumer: You still think it's beautiful to die for your country. The first bombardment taught us better. When it comes to dying for country, it's better not to die at all.
- Créditos adicionalesLater reissues of the film mentioned that the film was an Academy Award winner in the opening credits.
- Versiones alternativasThe Library of Congess also restored a sound version, 133 minutes long, which is the version occasionally shown on American TV.
- ConexionesEdited into Hombres del mañana (1934)
Selecciones populares
- How long is All Quiet on the Western Front?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idiomas
- Títulos en diferentes países
- All Quiet on the Western Front
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Empresa productora
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- 1.200.000 US$ (estimación)
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 466 US$
- Duración
- 2h 32min(152 min)
- Color







