Winter War
- 2017
- Tous publics
- 2h 20m
IMDb RATING
3.9/10
326
YOUR RATING
January 1945. The first French regiment of paratroopers to fight with an American unit prepares to liberate Alsace in France during World War II.January 1945. The first French regiment of paratroopers to fight with an American unit prepares to liberate Alsace in France during World War II.January 1945. The first French regiment of paratroopers to fight with an American unit prepares to liberate Alsace in France during World War II.
- Awards
- 5 nominations total
Tommy-Lee Baïk
- Melbarte
- (as Tommy Lee Baïk)
Natale Naccari
- Moretti
- (as Naccari Natale)
James Larabee
- Franois Henaq
- (voice)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This is a WW2 film about disgruntled, weary soldiers from different nations in a frozen forest.
There is a lot of "smartness" to this. Some people won't like the disjointed dialog with pauses between lines, but that is how people spoke long ago. The constant "I interrupt the speaker cause I'm superior and he's inferior" dialog has been evolving in Western culture for the past 40 years.
But there was a time when being a brat wasn't praised the way that being a brat is praised today. And you thought the Nazis lost the war?
The only real drawback is how predictable the fate is for almost every character. It follows the Hollywood formula guideline of contriving bullets to only hit characters who are relatable, but never can find characters who are just hateful for no reason.
That, of course, has almost always been the Hollywood formula, although it wasn't preached as much until the mid sixties on into the eighties.
Very contrived, very predictable, but the dramatics are very good, and the characters do feel right for the times due to the constant pauses and lack of dialog among a tired group of soldiers.
There is a lot of "smartness" to this. Some people won't like the disjointed dialog with pauses between lines, but that is how people spoke long ago. The constant "I interrupt the speaker cause I'm superior and he's inferior" dialog has been evolving in Western culture for the past 40 years.
But there was a time when being a brat wasn't praised the way that being a brat is praised today. And you thought the Nazis lost the war?
The only real drawback is how predictable the fate is for almost every character. It follows the Hollywood formula guideline of contriving bullets to only hit characters who are relatable, but never can find characters who are just hateful for no reason.
That, of course, has almost always been the Hollywood formula, although it wasn't preached as much until the mid sixties on into the eighties.
Very contrived, very predictable, but the dramatics are very good, and the characters do feel right for the times due to the constant pauses and lack of dialog among a tired group of soldiers.
Hi all
I have seen many comments criticizing the English dubbing but having seen the film in French VO I will not allow myself to judge as rajotd.
This film is a loyal historical testimony concerning the brave soldiers (american and french) who fought in the pocket of Colmar and the links between them.
Very well shot and with complete historical realism we note however the small budget allocated to the effects, more real than special ;-)
However, where the film draws all its excellence, it is in the singular story that it tells and in the links between close characters that it brilliantly highlights.
Throughout each scene, the director's passion is felt and during the course of the film we understand how the script has been worked to achieve this result.
Therefore it is a touching, realistic and ultimately both simple and complex film for the story it tells!
I have seen many comments criticizing the English dubbing but having seen the film in French VO I will not allow myself to judge as rajotd.
This film is a loyal historical testimony concerning the brave soldiers (american and french) who fought in the pocket of Colmar and the links between them.
Very well shot and with complete historical realism we note however the small budget allocated to the effects, more real than special ;-)
However, where the film draws all its excellence, it is in the singular story that it tells and in the links between close characters that it brilliantly highlights.
Throughout each scene, the director's passion is felt and during the course of the film we understand how the script has been worked to achieve this result.
Therefore it is a touching, realistic and ultimately both simple and complex film for the story it tells!
Ivan has nothing on this, historically accurate I paid 5 dollars to rent it on iTunes and enjoyed it
Seven months after D-Day, French and American soldiers team-up in the woods outside Jebsheim to liberate northeast France from the German invasion (Jebsheim is located 5-6 miles west of the German border).
"The Frozen Front" (2017), originally titled "Winter War," is a French Indie that pays tribute to the Franco-American allies who secured the forests bordering Jebsheim in preparation for The Battle of Jebsheim that was fought from January 24 to February 2, 1945. The low-budget filmmaking is akin to "Straight into Darkness" (2004), but more straightforward and less surrealistic, although this one isn't as good. It's akin to a more dramatic "When Trumpets Fade" (1998) dubbed in English (from the original French), but made on a much lower budget and less compelling story-wise.
Armchair critics lambaste the movie mainly because of the English dubbing that doesn't match the lips with some lines not dubbed at all wherein you'll see lips move, but no sound. If you can ignore this issue, "The Frozen Front" is effective in showing what it was like for the tough soldiers who took the forests outside the village in January, 1945. The acting is surprisingly convincing despite what critics claim and the English speaking fits the characters despite the dubbing not matching the lips.
The challenges and horrors of war in a winter wilderness setting are chronicled: The cold, the sparse sustenance, living in foxholes, sudden violence, horrific wounds, buddies dying, ramshackle medical care, despair, perseverance, chaplains, brother vs. brother and hope for victory.
The writer/director confidently takes his time in telling his commemorative tale, which I can't help respect. This is a movie solely about men fighting in the wintery woods during WW2, which might be too one-dimensional for many viewers, not to mention overlong by about an hour. Then there's the problematic dubbing.
The film runs 2 hours, 22 minutes, and was presumably shot in France (it was definitely shot in mainland Europe, but I can't find specific data).
GRADE: C
"The Frozen Front" (2017), originally titled "Winter War," is a French Indie that pays tribute to the Franco-American allies who secured the forests bordering Jebsheim in preparation for The Battle of Jebsheim that was fought from January 24 to February 2, 1945. The low-budget filmmaking is akin to "Straight into Darkness" (2004), but more straightforward and less surrealistic, although this one isn't as good. It's akin to a more dramatic "When Trumpets Fade" (1998) dubbed in English (from the original French), but made on a much lower budget and less compelling story-wise.
Armchair critics lambaste the movie mainly because of the English dubbing that doesn't match the lips with some lines not dubbed at all wherein you'll see lips move, but no sound. If you can ignore this issue, "The Frozen Front" is effective in showing what it was like for the tough soldiers who took the forests outside the village in January, 1945. The acting is surprisingly convincing despite what critics claim and the English speaking fits the characters despite the dubbing not matching the lips.
The challenges and horrors of war in a winter wilderness setting are chronicled: The cold, the sparse sustenance, living in foxholes, sudden violence, horrific wounds, buddies dying, ramshackle medical care, despair, perseverance, chaplains, brother vs. brother and hope for victory.
The writer/director confidently takes his time in telling his commemorative tale, which I can't help respect. This is a movie solely about men fighting in the wintery woods during WW2, which might be too one-dimensional for many viewers, not to mention overlong by about an hour. Then there's the problematic dubbing.
The film runs 2 hours, 22 minutes, and was presumably shot in France (it was definitely shot in mainland Europe, but I can't find specific data).
GRADE: C
They say that war is hours of boredom punctuated by moments of sheer terror. Well, they got the boredom right. Also, it is hard to relate to the characters, who spend more time whining and bickering than fighting the Germans.
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- Release date
- Country of origin
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- Also known as
- The Frozen Front
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime2 hours 20 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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