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La tragédie de la mine

Original title: Kameradschaft
  • 1931
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
La tragédie de la mine (1931)
DramaThriller

Plea against war and for friendship between peoples, through the story of French miners rescued by German colleagues after a firedamp explosion.Plea against war and for friendship between peoples, through the story of French miners rescued by German colleagues after a firedamp explosion.Plea against war and for friendship between peoples, through the story of French miners rescued by German colleagues after a firedamp explosion.

  • Director
    • Georg Wilhelm Pabst
  • Writers
    • Anna Gmeyner
    • Carl Haensel
    • Peter Martin Lampel
  • Stars
    • Alexander Granach
    • Fritz Kampers
    • Ernst Busch
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    1.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Georg Wilhelm Pabst
    • Writers
      • Anna Gmeyner
      • Carl Haensel
      • Peter Martin Lampel
    • Stars
      • Alexander Granach
      • Fritz Kampers
      • Ernst Busch
    • 21User reviews
    • 33Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Photos18

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    Top cast32

    Edit
    Alexander Granach
    Alexander Granach
    • Kasper
    Fritz Kampers
    Fritz Kampers
    • Wilderer
    Ernst Busch
    Ernst Busch
    • Wittkopp
    Elisabeth Wendt
    Elisabeth Wendt
    • Frau Anna Wittkopp
    Gustav Püttjer
    • Kaplan
    Oskar Höcker
    Oskar Höcker
    • Obersteiger
    Daniel Mendaille
    Daniel Mendaille
    • Jean Leclerc
    Georges Charlia
    Georges Charlia
    • Emile
    Andrée Ducret
    • Françoise
    Alex Bernard
    Alex Bernard
    • Grand-père, le vieux mineur
    Pierre-Louis
    • Georges - le petit galibot
    Héléna Manson
    Héléna Manson
    • Rose, la femme du mineur blessé
    Marcel Lesieur
    • Albert
    Willem Holsboer
    • Ingenieur des deutschen Bergwerks
    • (as Willem Holzboer)
    Georges Tourreil
    Georges Tourreil
    • L'ingénieur
    Palmyre Levasseur
    Teddy Michaud
    Rortais
    • Director
      • Georg Wilhelm Pabst
    • Writers
      • Anna Gmeyner
      • Carl Haensel
      • Peter Martin Lampel
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews21

    7.51.9K
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    Featured reviews

    9planktonrules

    German film merged with the style of Italian Neo-Realism

    This film, along with WESTFRONT 1918, are my favorite Pabst-directed films and I enjoyed them more than his much more famous films which starred Louise Brooks (such as PANDORA'S BOX). It's probably because both are very similar to the Neo-Realist films that the Italians perfected in the 1940s and 50s. This style film called for using non-actors (just typical folks) in everyday settings in order to create intensely involving and realistic films.

    In this case, the film is about French and German coal miners, so appropriately, the people in the roles seem like miners--not actors. The central conflict as the film begins is that there is a huge mine located on the Franco-German border. Instead of one big mine, it is divided at the border and German workers are not welcome in the French mine, despite there being greater unemployment in Germany. This, language differences (illustrated wonderfully in a dance hall scene) and WWI conspire to create a huge rift between the factions--resulting in a WE vs. THEY mentality. Later, an explosion causes a huge collapse in the French and the Germans refuse to sit back and do nothing. Risking their own lives, they prove that there is true comradeship between miners and men in general.

    The film is a strong criticism of xenophobia and tried, in vain, to get the German audiences to see the futility of war and hatred. It was a gorgeously moving film with some of the scariest and claustrophobic images I have ever seen. Considering history, though, the film's impact was minimal at best. It's a real shame, as like this one, WESTFRONT 1918, JÁACCUSE (Gance) and ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT (Milestone) had great messages of peace and harmony but ultimately were failures in positively swaying public opinion. So, from a historical point of view, it's an amazing and sad relic that is well worth seeing.
    10whpratt1

    Masterpiece of Work in 1931

    The name of this film alone made me want to see just what it was all about, so I taped this film during the early hours of the AM. If you ever wanted to see what miners had to go through during the early days and actually see a dramatic scene when the mine crumbles in on the men. This film clearly wants to show that Germany and France can work together and be friends after WW I and how the Germans came to the aid of the French miners much to the unbelief of the French townsfolk. The actors were all outstanding, with unusual scenes in the mine with a horse and a small young boy who worked in the mine. There is an old old retired miner who manges to go down the mine by ladder when the elevator breaks down. If you are a real film buff, this is a film you will not want to miss.
    9atlasmb

    A Masterpiece With A Message

    Fire and collapse threaten the lives of hundreds of French miners in this B&W masterpiece released in 1931. Director Pabst uses the occasion of the collapse as a statement against war. Despite animosities between France and Germany, some German miners assemble a rescue team, cross the border and go underground to aid those trapped below.

    The film is amazing in its depiction of mining--the claustrophobic working conditions, the dusty blackness, the danger. The verisimilitude is so convincing that it feels like actors must have been at risk themselves.

    Despite language differences and the fears that war promulgates, French and German teams manage to save numerous miners. During the hours that the rescue efforts are being undertaken, the film depicts various points of view and brings together a number of subplots: a grandfather who fears for his grandson trapped in the mine; the townspeople united by their common fears and helpless feelings; a woman who longs to leave behind the inevitable heartbreaks that life in a mining town offers, but is drawn back by her love; the German miners who recognize their commonalities with the miners on the other side of the border.

    This is an important story, reminding the viewer that humanity should always trump nationality.
    9otradisneylandia

    Technically superb

    The special effects are top notch, very superior to the Hollywood standards of its time (just compare this film to "San Francisco", made five years later). Most reviewers write about how realistic this film is, but the mine interior was entirely recreated in studio. And it looks like a real claustrophobic coal mine. Amazing! Technically it is superb. About the story and the message a lot has been said, so no need to repeat how good and necessary this film was. I saw it with the epilogue sequence included. Sad end, but it is realistic in this point too. Good intentions meet the old dark forces. Just read Oscar Wilde's "The young king". Its end is even more pessimistic. At least, Pabst opens a door to fight and hope. The closed frontier is only an advice: beware! the fight won't be easy.
    9brogmiller

    "Les Allemands? Ce n'est pas possible!"

    Regarded by many as the highpoint of German socialist film-making this fourteenth film of G. W. Pabst is a companion piece to his earlier 'Westfront 1918'.

    Based upon the mining disaster at Courrieres in 1906, the director has cleverly chosen to set his film in the mining communities on the Lorraine/Saar border just after the end of the first World War which enables him to show the tensions and mutual distrust between top dog France and underdog Germany.

    What strikes one most about Pabst's film are the claustrophobic mine galleries which have been built from scratch in the studio by Erno Metzner and which facilitate the roving camera and effective lighting of the legendary Fritz Arno Wagner whilst Pabst's mastery of crowd scenes is put to stunning use in its depiction of mass anguish.

    Viewers will no doubt spot Alexander Granach who was to flee Germany for America and Ernst Busch, an avowed Communist who survived despite being on the Nazi hit list.

    This sober, restrained masterpiece with its naively optimistic plea for international brotherhood, although critically well received, was unsurprisingly disdained by both French and German audiences.

    The final, symbolic scene in which the iron barrier between the French and German mines is re-established in the presence of stern looking military officials is not only grotesquely ironic but gives dreadful note of the horrors to come.

    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The print at the British Film Institute is missing the final scene , which may have been deliberately removed by censorship, but is considered by Pabst,s long time editor to have been the most important sequence in the entire film.
    • Connections
      Featured in Loin de Hollywood - L'art européen du cinéma muet (1995)

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 29, 1932 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Germany
      • France
    • Languages
      • French
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Comradeship
    • Filming locations
      • Bethune, France
    • Production companies
      • Nero-Film AG
      • Gaumont-Franco Film-Aubert (G.F.F.A)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 33m(93 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.20 : 1

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