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À l'Ouest rien de nouveau

Original title: All Quiet on the Western Front
  • 1930
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 32m
IMDb RATING
8.1/10
70K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
4,243
1,061
À l'Ouest rien de nouveau (1930)
A German youth eagerly enters World War I, but his enthusiasm wanes as he gets a firsthand view of the horror.
Play trailer2:29
2 Videos
99+ Photos
EpicPsychological DramaTragedyWar EpicDramaWar

A German youth eagerly enters World War I, but his enthusiasm wanes as he gets a firsthand view of the horror.A German youth eagerly enters World War I, but his enthusiasm wanes as he gets a firsthand view of the horror.A German youth eagerly enters World War I, but his enthusiasm wanes as he gets a firsthand view of the horror.

  • Director
    • Lewis Milestone
  • Writers
    • Erich Maria Remarque
    • Maxwell Anderson
    • George Abbott
  • Stars
    • Lew Ayres
    • Louis Wolheim
    • John Wray
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.1/10
    70K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    4,243
    1,061
    • Director
      • Lewis Milestone
    • Writers
      • Erich Maria Remarque
      • Maxwell Anderson
      • George Abbott
    • Stars
      • Lew Ayres
      • Louis Wolheim
      • John Wray
    • 313User reviews
    • 101Critic reviews
    • 91Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 2 Oscars
      • 10 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos2

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:29
    Trailer
    Shot for Shot: All Quiet on the Western Front
    Clip 1:01
    Shot for Shot: All Quiet on the Western Front
    Shot for Shot: All Quiet on the Western Front
    Clip 1:01
    Shot for Shot: All Quiet on the Western Front

    Photos130

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    Top cast47

    Edit
    Lew Ayres
    Lew Ayres
    • Paul
    • (as Lewis Ayres)
    Louis Wolheim
    Louis Wolheim
    • Kat
    John Wray
    John Wray
    • Himmelstoss
    Arnold Lucy
    Arnold Lucy
    • Kantorek
    Ben Alexander
    Ben Alexander
    • Kemmerich
    • (as Kemmerick)
    Scott Kolk
    Scott Kolk
    • Leer
    Owen Davis Jr.
    Owen Davis Jr.
    • Peter
    Walter Rogers
    Walter Rogers
    • Behn
    • (as Walter Browne Rogers)
    William Bakewell
    William Bakewell
    • Albert
    Russell Gleason
    Russell Gleason
    • Mueller
    Richard Alexander
    Richard Alexander
    • Westhus
    Harold Goodwin
    Harold Goodwin
    • Detering
    Slim Summerville
    Slim Summerville
    • Tjaden
    • (as 'Slim' Summerville)
    G. Pat Collins
    G. Pat Collins
    • Bertinck
    • (as Pat Collins)
    Beryl Mercer
    Beryl Mercer
    • Paul's Mother
    Edmund Breese
    Edmund Breese
    • Herr Meyer
    Zasu Pitts
    Zasu Pitts
    • Frau Bäumer - Silent Version Trailer only
    • (scenes deleted)
    Ernie Adams
    Ernie Adams
    • 2nd Medic Orderly
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Lewis Milestone
    • Writers
      • Erich Maria Remarque
      • Maxwell Anderson
      • George Abbott
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews313

    8.170.2K
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    Summary

    Reviewers say 'All Quiet on the Western Front' is acclaimed for its anti-war stance and realistic portrayal of World War I, emphasizing the horrors and futility of conflict. The film's technical innovations and performances, especially by Lew Ayres and Louis Wolheim, are highly praised. However, some find the acting melodramatic and the pacing slow, with a disjointed narrative. Its impact and relevance, particularly in depicting the human cost of war, remain significant.
    AI-generated from the text of user reviews

    Featured reviews

    tfrizzell

    The First Truly Great Movie Ever Produced

    "All Quiet on the Western Front" is important filmmaking that still rings true today. The film deals with World War I combat through the eyes of the enemy (the Germans). For the first time ever it was realized how heartbreaking war really is, for all involved. One key message within the film is that innocence cannot survive on the battlefield. War is an awful thing that has no true winners, just losers. Brilliant performances from all involved make the film believable and accurate for the most part. A very young Lew Ayres is the best as his story creates tension for the entire film. This is perhaps the first film that proved that the cinema could be a truly imperative medium. The film was scorned by many in the U.S. as some thought that showing the Germans as sympathetic characters was in poor taste. Germans hated the film because of its anti-war message. Hitler was about to become a world power and he wanted all Germans to be excited and enthusiastic about combat. This film goes against those ideals. The Academy was brave enough and smart enough to award the film with the Best Picture Oscar in 1930 and Lewis Milestone became the first multiple Oscar winner in the directing category. "All Quiet on the Western Front" has the storyline of Malick's "The Thin Red Line" and the action and drama of Spielberg's "Saving Private Ryan". An overwhelming film experience. 5 stars out of 5.
    10planktonrules

    Probably the greatest war film ever made

    The film begins in a classroom. Outside, martial music is blaring and the professor inside the room is lecturing the boys about their duty to the Fatherland and encouraging them all to as a group in the German army at the outbreak of WWI. The film is exceptional in how it captures the enthusiasm and naiveté of the boys--as they imagine glory awaiting them after they enlist! Even in boot camp, the mood is light and the new recruits are excited about seeing their first action. This perfectly sets the stage for the actual war--not the sanitized or "fun" war of many films but the hellish and pointless mess that was WWI. The rest of the film is brutally honest and harsh and shows how the students die off one-by-one and the remaining students become more and more jaded and emotionally dead due to the fighting.

    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.
    9grantss

    Great WW1 movie

    World War 1 and a young German, Paul Baumer, enthusiastically joins the Army. With romantic notions of war and idealistic dreams in his head he undergoes training and then is sent off to the Western Front. In due course the romantic notions are replaced by the harsh reality of war and he becomes disillusioned with it all.

    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.
    10bkoganbing

    Wilhelmine Perspective

    Erich Maria Remarque's novel and the film made from it may possibly be the greatest anti-war statement ever created. All Quiet on the Western Front won a deserved Best Picture Academy Award in the year it came out and brought great prestige to Universal Pictures as the first Oscar in that category won by that studio.

    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.
    9dfwesley

    WW! from a German soldier's viewpoint

    I was in high school when I first saw this great war film and I am now a senior, senior, citizen and have seen it a few more times. ALL QUIET remains right at the top of my list of outstanding war pictures. Here was a unique depiction of life in the trenches from an enemy point of view, a novel approach.

    Lew Ayres gives a memorable performance as Paul Baumer, the sensitive German soldier, and has a fine supporting cast. The vivid battles in the trenches remain in my thought, and though they lack the technological know how of today, are indelible.

    One of the most touching scenes is when Baumer kills the Frenchman in the shell hole and remorse overcomes him. Another tragic part is when his buddy is dying in the hospital and is visited by his comrades. A lighter scene is when the company has an over abundance of food due to its losses and the men become satiated. They are so comfortable that they are inclined to philosophize about the causes of war and its solution.

    When Paul loses his friend, his depression grows and his death at the hands of a sniper is a fitting end to it all. The remake, with Ernest Borgnine, was satisfactory, but could not approach the quality of the original which I often find to be true.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      With 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.
    • Goofs
      When Paul talks to the dead soldier in the pit, the soldier is breathing visibly and at one point his eyes blink.
    • Quotes

      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.

    • Crazy credits
      Later reissues of the film mentioned that the film was an Academy Award winner in the opening credits.
    • Alternate versions
      The Library of Congess also restored a sound version, 133 minutes long, which is the version occasionally shown on American TV.
    • Connections
      Edited into Comme les grands (1934)
    • Soundtracks
      All Quiet on the Western Front
      (1930) (uncredited)

      Music by Lou Handman

      Lyrics by Bernie Grossman

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • November 21, 1930 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • German
      • Latin
    • Also known as
      • Sin novedad en el frente
    • Filming locations
      • Sherwood Forest, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Universal Pictures
      • RKO Radio Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $1,200,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $466
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 32 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White

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