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Padenie Berlina

  • 1950
  • 2h 47min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
5.6/10
600
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Padenie Berlina (1950)
DramaGuerra

Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA years-long struggle of the Soviet people against the German war machine is shown from the point of view of Stalin and from the point of view of an ordinary soldier and his beloved girl.A years-long struggle of the Soviet people against the German war machine is shown from the point of view of Stalin and from the point of view of an ordinary soldier and his beloved girl.A years-long struggle of the Soviet people against the German war machine is shown from the point of view of Stalin and from the point of view of an ordinary soldier and his beloved girl.

  • Dirección
    • Mikheil Chiaureli
  • Guionistas
    • Mikheil Chiaureli
    • Pyotr Pavlenko
  • Elenco
    • Mikheil Gelovani
    • Boris Andreyev
    • Vladimir Savelev
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    5.6/10
    600
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Mikheil Chiaureli
    • Guionistas
      • Mikheil Chiaureli
      • Pyotr Pavlenko
    • Elenco
      • Mikheil Gelovani
      • Boris Andreyev
      • Vladimir Savelev
    • 16Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 5Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 2 premios ganados en total

    Fotos14

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    Elenco principal64

    Editar
    Mikheil Gelovani
    Mikheil Gelovani
    • Iosef Stalin
    Boris Andreyev
    Boris Andreyev
    • Alexei Ivanov nicknamed Aliocha
    Vladimir Savelev
    Vladimir Savelev
    • Adolf Hitler
    • (as V. Savelyev)
    Marina Kovalyova
    Marina Kovalyova
    • Natasha Rumanyova Vasilnyeva
    • (as M. Kovalyova)
    N. Petrunkin
    • Goebbels
    Marie Nováková
    • Eva Braun
    Yuri Timoshenko
    Yuri Timoshenko
    • Kostya Zavchenko
    • (as G. Timoshenko)
    A. Urasalyev
    • Yusupov
    Nikolay Bogolyubov
    Nikolay Bogolyubov
    • Factory Superintendent Kumchinsky
    Jan Werich
    Jan Werich
    • Hermann Goering
    • (as Y. Verikh)
    Sofiya Giatsintova
    Sofiya Giatsintova
    • MRs Ivanov - Alexei's mother
    • (as S. Giatsyntova)
    K. Roden
    • Charles Bedston
    Boris Tenin
    Boris Tenin
    • Gen. Chujkov
    Viktor Stanitsyn
    Viktor Stanitsyn
    • British Prime Minister Winston Churchill
    Oleg Frelikh
    • U.S. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt
    Boris Livanov
    Boris Livanov
    • Gen. Rokossovsky
    Sergei Blinnikov
    Sergei Blinnikov
    • Gen. Ivan Koniev
    Vladimir Lyubimov
    • General Vasilyevsky
    • Dirección
      • Mikheil Chiaureli
    • Guionistas
      • Mikheil Chiaureli
      • Pyotr Pavlenko
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios16

    5.6600
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    Opiniones destacadas

    ffgomezforever

    USSR propaganda, but worth seeing

    This of course is a pro-Stalin Russian film, but it has other values.First of all, for occidental public, and as many other Russian films of the 40's and 50's, it shows us the almost never watched Russian-side of the II World War.For them it was the "Liberation War", where they lost 18 to 21 million people, more than all the other nation's loses.Something we often forget or simply ignore, so this is an opportunity, from a mere historical view, to look at that "ignored" side of the big war. Keeping Stalin speeches, his battle planning and his final and incredible arrival to Berlin apart, the movie shows good epic moments:the final battle for the Reichstag, the surrender of the German troops in the streets of Berlin, the dialog between the "good worker and soldier" Aloisha with a German officer explaining how they will destroy his city and house as they did with their houses and cities, the final celebration before the(real)ruins of the Reichstag...And also the Hitler's scenes, which constitute a kind of "grand guignol", another movie inserted in the epic film.It's also interesting to see the theories (wether they be only partly true)about Nazis relations with English industrial trusts in the middle of the war, or Hitler's hope of an agreement with Anglo-Americans against Russians, anticipating the Cold War.We the Spanish know something about this, as the fascist Franco was kept in power by the allies, taking advantage of this cold war. "Padeniye Berlina", sometimes boring and a bit theatrical, contains these and many other good scenes, an attractive photographic work (with those Agfa color negatives, so different, but not less fascinating, from the accustomed American technicolor of the time), and a good score. And then , the Stalin omnipresence. But, sceptical as I am in relation to all political regimes, I don't think this propaganda film to be so different from other occidental films of the kind (war, patriotic ones). For me, it's good to get now the opportunity to watch many soviet films we couldn't even know of before the "DVD-era" arrived.They show less propaganda than we could expect (not in this film, of course)and let us know of their daily stories, or their war epics and miseries, so similar to the hundred of stories of American cinema with which we grew up.
    9PWNYCNY

    Soviet propoganda, yet warrants serious consideration

    The Fall of Berlin 1950 Get beyond the stagy acting and the cheap special effects, and this movie presents the Soviet version of how and why the Russians wound up in Berlin in April 1945. Although ostensibly a love story between a Soviet factory worker who serves in the Red Army and Soviet school teacher who is kidnapped by the Germans and becomes a slave laborer inside Germany, Stalin and Hitler are the principal characters. The contrast between the two could not more stark. Hitler is portrayed has a megalomania driven fanatic who responded to bad news, meaning the truth, with fits of hysteria while Stalin is portrayed as an all-caring leader who through steadfast leadership guides the Soviet Union to victory. Although the movie glorifies Stalin, it also honors the Red Army soldiers who fought the battles. According to the movie, Stalin decides to invade Berlin to prevent the Germans from giving up the city to the allies and then joining the allies to fight the Russians. Hitler believes that he could still win the war by breaking up the American-Soviet alliance. Stalin knows this and directs his generals to ignore German provocations. Another controversial scene is the Yalta Conference. This scene shows Stalin having taken action to relieve German pressure on the allies in 1944/1945. Other scenes show Hitler scornfully rejecting his generals' warnings not to invade Russia, and becoming increasingly despondent as the bad news keeps piling up. The movie portrays the Nazi leaders as little more than opportunistic thugs and plunderers supported by sycophants who are united by one goal: to crush communism. Those supporting Hitler include American business interests and the Catholic Church. The movie is Soviet propaganda, nonetheless, the movie warrants being taken seriously as a cinematic work. The fact is that Hitler lost and Stalin won. The Russians, and not the allies, defeated the Germans in Berlin. These facts alone give the movie's storyline some credibility. Whether it fairly and accurately portrays the role of the Allies in winning the war is another question.
    10ichapman

    A classic of its kind

    In the annals of movies that afford rich entertainment in ways totally unintended by their makers, The Fall of Berlin occupies an honoured place.

    The story, the vicissitudes of a soldier at the front and his sweetheart in a German forced labour camp, is juxtaposed with sequences of Stalin and Hitler conducting the war.

    Stalin, wise, kind and, of course, a supreme military leader is a hoot, but it is Hitler who rivets and enthralls. In scenes overdrawn to the point of parody and beyond, all livid blues and menacing shadows, actor V. Savelyev delivers a performance that should have had him sent to the gulag for upstaging his fellow despot. In his final, hilarious scene, his dog Blondi is despached by a spiked canape delivered by Eva Braun during their wedding breakfast - surely the cinema's finest death scene!

    10 out of 10!
    7hdm93050

    A Birthday Present that Answers the Age Old Question....

    A Birthday Present that finally answers the age old question of what to get the man who has everything. This film was presented to Stalin on his 70th birthday and is the archtypical Stalin Film. It is intriguing insight into the mindset of the man who ruled and terrorized 1/5 of all humanity and 1//2 of Europe by the film's 1949 release date. The acting, especially the Aliosha and Natasha love plot tied in with Stalin is poorly acted but makes all sense when you look at how Aliosha looks to Stalin for advice, because truth be told this film is a romance for Stalin. The special effects and lighting are excellent for a 1940s film and it is shot in a grand scale that matched the efforts of Kolberg, Gone with the Wind, and the 1926 Ben Hur.

    The best parts of this film are the impressions of Churchill and Hitler. Minus Churchill speaking Russian, they have his lisp and mannerisms done exceedingly well. Hitler and Goering provide great charictatures and are humorously well done. At best its an intriguing insight into the delusions of madness that Stalin subjected his people to and at worst its a 2 hour festival of unintentional humor. I'd recommend it for any historian.
    7brogmiller

    "Calm down, Adolf!"

    In his famous speech from the Party Congress of 1956 Nikita Khrushchev denounced the 'personality cult' of his former master, in whose crimes he must certainly have shared and referred to 'The Fall of Berlin' as a film in which 'Stalin acts for everyone.'

    Designed as a gift to Uncle Joe on his seventieth birthday, this masterful piece of propoganda is essentially fantasy packaged as documentary truth in which he is portrayed by regular Stalin impersonator Mikheil Gelovani as a man of Olympian proportions, wise, benign, and a brilliant military strategist to boot. Supremely ironic therefore that the most interesting character in the piece is Hitler, given a superbly outrageous, pantomime villain performance by Vladimir Savelyev.

    Viewed as either historical or hysterical this massive fresco is nevertheless an astounding achievement both technically and logistically by director Mikheil Chiaureli and his team and gloriously filmed in Sovcolor, derived from Agfacolor stock filched by the Red Army from Berlin. The score is by Dmitri Shostakovich who was, at the time, living largely on loans from friends whilst supplementing his income with film work and 'democratic' vocal pieces. His music for this is rather banal but contains a reference to the justly famous ostinato march from his Leningrad Symphony of 1942. Interesting to note that a few months after Stalin's eagerly awaited death in 1953, the composer premiered his Tenth Symphony in which the second movement is a blistering portrait of Stalin whilst the finale exhibits a joy and jubilation that Shostakovich never again allowed himself.

    A character in the film proclaims that 'Stalin is always with us' and it beggars belief that flowers are still being laid on this mass murderer's tomb.

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

    Editar
    • Trivia
      The scene at the end of the movie where Joseph Stalin appears in Berlin never occurred. After seeing this in the film, Stalin told the filmmaker that he had wished he had gone to Berlin.
    • Errores
      Hitler and Eva Braun's wedding is accompanied by Felix Mendelssohn'a classic composition "The Wedding March," but in reality all of Mendelssohn's music was banned in Nazi Germany because he was Jewish.
    • Citas

      Alexei Ivanov nicknamed Aliocha: Greetings, Vissarion Ivanovich.

      Iosef Stalin: No, this is how my father was called. And I am Joseph Vissarionovich.

      Alexei Ivanov nicknamed Aliocha: I know, comrade Stalin.

    • Versiones alternativas
      There is an Italian DVD edition of this movie, distributed by DNA Srl, entitled "La caduta di Berlino". The movie was re-edited with the contribution of the film history scholar Riccardo Cusin. This version is also available in streaming on some platforms.
    • Conexiones
      Edited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: Une vague nouvelle (1999)

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    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 21 de enero de 1950 (Unión Soviética)
    • País de origen
      • Unión Soviética
    • Idioma
      • Ruso
    • También se conoce como
      • The Fall of Berlin
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • DEFA-Studio für Spielfilme, Babelsberg, Potsdam, Brandenburg, Alemania(Studio)
    • Productora
      • Mosfilm
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 2h 47min(167 min)
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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