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Marcher ou mourir

Original title: Italiani brava gente
  • 1964
  • 2h 17m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
458
YOUR RATING
Marcher ou mourir (1964)
DramaHistoryWar

Chronicle of the unheralded and unsuccessful invasion of the Soviet Union by the Italian army during World War II.Chronicle of the unheralded and unsuccessful invasion of the Soviet Union by the Italian army during World War II.Chronicle of the unheralded and unsuccessful invasion of the Soviet Union by the Italian army during World War II.

  • Director
    • Giuseppe De Santis
  • Writers
    • Ennio De Concini
    • Giuseppe De Santis
    • Augusto Frassinetti
  • Stars
    • Arthur Kennedy
    • Zhanna Prokhorenko
    • Raffaele Pisu
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    458
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Giuseppe De Santis
    • Writers
      • Ennio De Concini
      • Giuseppe De Santis
      • Augusto Frassinetti
    • Stars
      • Arthur Kennedy
      • Zhanna Prokhorenko
      • Raffaele Pisu
    • 17User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Photos45

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    Top cast35

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    Arthur Kennedy
    Arthur Kennedy
    • Ferro Maria Ferri
    Zhanna Prokhorenko
    Zhanna Prokhorenko
    • Katya
    Raffaele Pisu
    Raffaele Pisu
    • Gabrielli
    Tatyana Samoylova
    Tatyana Samoylova
    • Sonya
    Andrea Checchi
    Andrea Checchi
    • Sermonti
    Riccardo Cucciolla
    Riccardo Cucciolla
    • Sanna
    Valeri Somov
    Valeri Somov
    • Giuliani
    Peter Falk
    Peter Falk
    • Medic Captain
    Nino Vingelli
    Nino Vingelli
    • Amalfitano
    Lev Prygunov
    Lev Prygunov
    • Bazzocchi
    Grigory Mikhaylov
    Grigory Mikhaylov
    • Russian Partisan
    • (as Grigorij Mikhailov)
    Ivan Paramonov
    Ivan Paramonov
    • German Deserter
    • (as I. Paramonov)
    Gino Pernice
    Gino Pernice
    • Collodi
    Boris Kozhukhov
    Boris Kozhukhov
    • Major
    Vincenzo Polizzi
    Vincenzo Polizzi
    • Sicilian
    Sergei Lukyanov
    Sergei Lukyanov
    • Partisan Commander
    • (as S. Lukyanov)
    Yuriy Nazarov
    Yuriy Nazarov
    • Russian Prisoner
    Ervin Knausmyuller
    Ervin Knausmyuller
    • German General
    • (as E. Knausmyuller)
    • Director
      • Giuseppe De Santis
    • Writers
      • Ennio De Concini
      • Giuseppe De Santis
      • Augusto Frassinetti
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    7.0458
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    Featured reviews

    8Aylmer

    The most definitive extant film on the subject of the Mussolini's Russian Adventure, 1942

    This is up there with STORM OVER THE PACIFIC as one of the most criminally unappreciated films dealing with the subject of World War 2. To my mind, it may well be the only film that depicts or even mentions the Italian expeditionary force on the Eastern Front battling against the Russians from 1941-1943, largely routed and destroyed along with their Romanian allies during the surrounding of the 6th Army at Stalingrad.

    The film follows a small unit of the much larger ARMIR force beginning with their hopeful and largely uncontested advance through the Ukraine in 1941. Things get a little wonky with the Germans contesting who gets to claim victory over a hard-fought battle over the Bug River, and even more-so with a unit of Italian Black Shirts led by an unscrupulous Arthur Kennedy and their organized looting. A tacked-on episode involves Peter Falk as a disillusioned Italian medic traded with Russian Partisans to provide some altruistic care in the midst of a lot of embittering carnage and insanity. Toward the end, things turn into an existentially nihilistic death march across the frozen steppes of Russia where the separated soldiers attempt to escape back to the imagined safety of their retreating front lines.

    Filmed in stark high-contrast black-and-white, the Soviet influence upon this film is very clear with its frequently artistic and experimental approach to the grim subject matter. This clashes a bit when we see it saddled with the expressive physical gesturing and bad dubbing we've become accustomed to from low budget Italian Euro-war movies. The film feels like an odd mish-mash of war epic, exploitation B-movie, and documentary-style art film all in one package so it fails just about as much as it succeeds, but contains more than its fair share of memorable moments.

    Who can forget the image of the lone Russian girl screaming in the middle of a sea of sunflowers while soldiers charge through... the T-34 machine-gunning bewildered soldiers riding a merry-go-round... the horizon ablaze with Katyusha rocket fire... or the Russians charging their cavalry through the snow into a mechanized column of retreating Axis soldiers?

    While the film is mostly a collection of loosely connected darkly ironic slices of life on the front, it is most successful when it sticks with history and presents the big battles. Depending on which cut you come across, this film contains a lot of historically accurate reenacting of some of the biggest battles of the early Eastern Front on the largely on locations they actually occurred at. The full cooperation of the Soviet Union was thrown behind this film with lots of tanks, trucks, extras, and armaments generously provided, and really shows in the scope. Unfortunately the filmmakers go too far in trying to play to many masters at once, painting the Soviets as noble heroes, the Germans and Italian Fascists as brutal thugs, and the regular Italian soldiery as patriotic family men who turn into hapless malingerers and deserters once they come to suffer from poor leadership, provisions, and lack of equipment. Much of this may be based on history, but the stereotyping at play becomes increasingly distracting and annoying as the film progresses to the point where it feels like the advancing waves of noble Soviets are invincible and infallible... like an unstoppable typhoon our bewildered protagonists have found themselves caught up in.

    It's likely the pro-Red stance of this film which caused it to be swept under the carpet and never get much of a release in the United States, coming at the height of the Cold War. For the casual modern viewer or student of history though there's a lot of entertainment and educational value to take away here once one sifts through the propaganda as merely a product of the time of the film's historiography. It almost says more about what was going on in a very politically divided Italy in 1965 than what was going on in Russia in 1941-42. Either way, this awkward and flawed, yet beautifully crafted film certainly has the artistic merit to deserve a wider and cleaned up, definitive release.
    10oxymoron-3

    A Miracle of Film Making at it's best

    I would certainly rate this film as one of the greatest war movies of all time. Certainly one of the most poignant. This film is in the league with Saving Private Ryan, Patton, Paths of Glory and a hand full of other important films about the lives and deaths of soldiers....any soldier, from any country....life is cherished and death has the same bitter taste to all young soldiers. A marvellous piece of work is this film.
    victrixix

    One of the best war films

    I remember seeing this movie (Attack and Retreat) as a kid back in the seventies. There are many, many images which have stuck in my mind from this film: The young soldier and girl in the vast sunflower field, the lone Russian tank mowing down Italian troops in a Russian town, Soviet cavalry charging over the snow fields, "Stalin's Organs" rocket launchers filling the skies with fire, a good-natured chase to get to a dead snow rabbit in no-man's land, all this after 30 years!

    I recently bought the video of this film, and forgot how good it really is. The best thing about it is the subject matter. One-it is a war film Two-it lacks a sappy romance angle Three-it deals with the Russian Front and Four-it deals with the Italian Army on that front.

    Strikes against it (only from a modern film viewers point of view, not mine) One-it was done in Italian, then over-dubbed in English Two-it is, after all, a war film without sappy romance and Three-it is in black and white.

    The feeling of loneliness, fear, panic, and desolation come out well in this movie. I can easily imagine the story of these men on the Russian front as having been real...it was as if the director himself had been there (not sure if he was). No character is expendable in this film (as it should be in a war film), so the fear of danger for each character is always there (much like Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front). The viewer is made to feel close to these men, because they are shown as being good, decent men caught in a huge man-destroying machine called the Eastern Front. The director shows much disdain for the German allies, portrays the Spanish allies as being rather silly running around with their banner even when the Earth was crashing down around them, and shows much respect for the Soviet soldiers, almost admiration. Pro-communist sympathy from a 1960's Italian director should be far from surprising. Even the characters liked the Internationale. One soldier liked to play it on his harmonica, and near the end two of them are whistling it. The Black Shirt "elite troops" were shown as thieves, cowards, and rapists. The average Italian soldiers were portrayed as victims along with the Russians.

    One interesting thing about the film was the appearance of Peter Falk as an Italian Army surgeon/playboy, about ten years before he became better known as the TV character Columbo.
    7blogda

    There is a really good movie in here

    So many remakes get produced these days, and so many of those turn out to be HORRIBLE decisions. Here is a screenplay that, with just a wee bit of work and a reasonable budget, could be made into one fine film. As it stands, this is an uneven picture with many moments of sheer brilliance. The saber-charging Cossacks are a terrifying lot. The scream of the rockets over the horizon, even with the deficient mono soundtrack, is truly hair-raising, especially considering the limited technology and budget that must have been available in that time and place. Other reviewers have objected to the heroic status conveyed to the Russians, both combatant and non-. Well, some of them WERE heroes, and but for their heroics there would have been a lot more Nazis for US to fight! I'm sorry if that upsets those laboring under neo-con delusions out there, but too bad for you.

    And there was certainly no shortage of heroes, and victims, among the ranks of the Italians. If you ever visit Italy, tour some of the little villages in the countryside. In the town square you'll often find an ornate statue dedicated to their World War I dead, usually five or six names, or maybe a few more, depending on the size of the town. Somewhere near you'll typically find a simple block of granite bearing the names of their sons who never came back from North Africa, Greece, and the Eastern Front in the next war, names that may number in the dozens or even hundreds. Just as the story of Corelli's Mandolin deserves to be told correctly, so does this one.
    10ameyer2

    A surprisingly beautiful film

    I saw this many, many years ago under the title "Attack and Retreat". It is about the Italian participation in World War II on the Eastern Front - where Mussolini sent soldiers to die for his own grandiose vision of himself as an equal partner in German conquest.

    I'm not able to recall many details, but there are a number of remarkable scenes that stand out in my memory. One was of a young soldier and a Russian girl in a field of high wheat. Quiet bullets whisper through the windblown stalks in deadly counterpoint to the young love of the boy and girl. In another scene Peter Falk, looking very small and lonely in a bleak and forbidding landscape of snow and ice, struggles to get to the rear while artillery rockets streak through the sky behind him. In still another scene, an Italian guard plays the Internationale on his harmonica to show some human solidarity to a group of Russian civilian prisoners. A mocking German guard demands that the prisoners sing, and a singer stands up to sing.

    Shot in very striking black and white, it was an effective antiwar and anti-fascist film with powerful visuals and a strong message of humanity.

    I liked it very much and wish it were shown more often.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The Italian version of the film is dedicated to all those who fought on the Eastern Front in the last war.
    • Goofs
      The Russian tanks featured in the film are T-34/85's, which were not produced until early 1944, a full a year after the events in this film took place.
    • Alternate versions
      The U.S. version omits several scenes, such as the first half of the battle on the Don which has the Italian soldiers returning the Russian artillery fire and putting up a spirited resistance for a few minutes. Instead, the U.S. version opens the battle with the Italians already in headlong retreat.
    • Connections
      Edited from La bataille de Stalingrad, 1ère époque (1949)
    • Soundtracks
      Italiano Karascio
      Written by Franco Migliacci (as F. Migliacci) and Armando Trovajoli (as A. Trovaioli)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 16, 1964 (Italy)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • Soviet Union
    • Languages
      • Italian
      • Russian
      • German
      • Spanish
      • Ukrainian
    • Also known as
      • Attack and Retreat
    • Filming locations
      • Poltava, Ukraine
    • Production companies
      • Coronet s.r.l.
      • Galatea Film
      • Mosfilm
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 17 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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