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IMDbPro

Stalingrad

Original title: Enemy at the Gates
  • 2001
  • Tous publics avec avertissement
  • 2h 11m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
287K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
1,857
591
Jude Law and Joseph Fiennes in Stalingrad (2001)
Pre, "Coming Soon"
Play trailer2:22
1 Video
99+ Photos
War EpicActionDramaWar

A Russian and a German sniper play a game of cat-and-mouse during the Battle of Stalingrad.A Russian and a German sniper play a game of cat-and-mouse during the Battle of Stalingrad.A Russian and a German sniper play a game of cat-and-mouse during the Battle of Stalingrad.

  • Director
    • Jean-Jacques Annaud
  • Writers
    • Jean-Jacques Annaud
    • Alain Godard
  • Stars
    • Jude Law
    • Ed Harris
    • Joseph Fiennes
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    287K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    1,857
    591
    • Director
      • Jean-Jacques Annaud
    • Writers
      • Jean-Jacques Annaud
      • Alain Godard
    • Stars
      • Jude Law
      • Ed Harris
      • Joseph Fiennes
    • 762User reviews
    • 93Critic reviews
    • 53Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 7 nominations total

    Videos1

    Enemy at the Gates
    Trailer 2:22
    Enemy at the Gates

    Photos150

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    Top cast69

    Edit
    Jude Law
    Jude Law
    • Vasily Zaitsev
    Ed Harris
    Ed Harris
    • Major Erwin König
    Joseph Fiennes
    Joseph Fiennes
    • Commisar Danilov
    Rachel Weisz
    Rachel Weisz
    • Tania Chernova
    Bob Hoskins
    Bob Hoskins
    • Nikita Khrushchev
    Ron Perlman
    Ron Perlman
    • Koulikov
    Eva Mattes
    Eva Mattes
    • Mother Filipov
    Gabriel Thomson
    Gabriel Thomson
    • Sacha Filipov
    • (as Gabriel Marshall-Thomson)
    Matthias Habich
    Matthias Habich
    • General Paulus
    Sophie Rois
    Sophie Rois
    • Ludmilla
    Ivan Shvedoff
    Ivan Shvedoff
    • Volodya
    Mario Bandi
    • Anton
    Hans-Martin Stier
    Hans-Martin Stier
    • Red Army General
    • (as Hans Martin Stier)
    Clemens Schick
    Clemens Schick
    • German NCO
    • (as Clemans Schick)
    Mikhail Matveev
    • Grandfather
    Alexander Schwan
    • Young Vassili Zaitsev
    Lenn Kudrjawizki
    Lenn Kudrjawizki
    • Comrade in Train
    Hendrik Arnst
    • Fat Colonel
    • Director
      • Jean-Jacques Annaud
    • Writers
      • Jean-Jacques Annaud
      • Alain Godard
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews762

    7.5286.5K
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    Featured reviews

    8mholmez

    Historially accurate? No. Entertaining? Absolutely!

    If you go into this film hoping for an historically accurate portrayal of the battle of Stalingrad then go watch a documentary, if you are however looking to be entertained by an action packed and gritty WW2 movie set in the city of Stalingrad, then go ahead and pick this up because it's nothing if not entertaining.

    The movie is about the real life sniper Vasily Zaitsev played by Jude Law and his exploits during the famous battle, the beginning of the movie is complete chaos as our main hero is sent to the front and we see the besieged and infamous city for the first time. It's honestly worth watching this movie just for the opening scene alone which is just incredibly well done in all aspects and portrays some of the horrors that the soviet troops would have witnessed when arriving there.

    Overall this is a highly entertaining war movie, fantastic CGI for the time, everything is well shot, the set pieces are gorgeous and even the acting and characters are well done.

    All that said this is of course a Hollywood production, don't expect much in the way of historical accuracy and definitely expect a silly love story (though not the worst) and everyone speaking English with poor Russian and German accents.
    Pastor Shlug

    A joke, from both a historical and a cinematic points of view

    First of all, I think it was a mistake for the screenwriters to pick and choose such a big event in the history of WWII, a turning point so to speak, only to have it placed as a background, to something so much less significant, a duel between two snipers. If one has never read anything historical or seen any chronological movies about battle of Stalingrad, or any other battle for that matter before seeing this movie, one might even wonder, how did Russians win the war at all? With one rifle per four hands? Against tanks? And aircraft? And heavy artillery? You know there's only so much even a drunken Russian can do with his ½ of a rifle. I see all these peoples' comments complaining that the main characters' accents were too British or too American and that that spoiled the true Russian Character, however the Hollywood makers portray that to be. But, being Russian myself, I saw nothing in the movie, at least on the Russian side, that resembled any truth to even how people spoke to each other, how they interacted with each other. They just didn't seem Russian to me, and it didn't matter what accents they used. These characters were biased cardboard characters, speaking cardboard character lines, and acting, well, cardboard-like. In the opening scenes of the movie they show a bunch of unarmed people thrown into battle only to be massacred by well armed Germans. That's a crock of sh*t, pardon my Russian. Basically by 1942, Hitler's army was fighting on two fronts, and it was very, very tired. Both sides were. Both sides were running out of people and supplies. Mostly, Battle of Stalingrad was a two-steps-forward-one-step-back kind of war. People charging and taking over some useless strategic point and then being thrown back, and then charging again. It was a battle to see who had a bigger stamina, because both sides were low in numbers. But it was also a battle involving tanks, artillery, and planes on BOTH sides. In the movie they omitted that, showing us diving Stukas, and yet surprisingly, no anti-aircraft guns firing at them, no Russian planes in the sky, just two soldiers armed with one rifle. Bullsh*t. No number of Vasiliy Zaycevs or Tatyana Whoevers would be able to stand off, and more even, reverse the tide of war against Germans, without having, basically an equally, if not better, equipped army at their side. If you look at the numbers, about 250,000 German and about 100,000 Russian soldiers lost their lives over Stalingrad. Well from the movie it might seem the opposite. Plus the whole mood of the movie. Russian soldiers, seemed no different from prisoners, defending Stalingrad only because of the muzzles pointed at their backs. But actually, believe it or not, many of these people were defending their motherland, their wives, daughters, sons, etc. and they were doing it not because they were to be shot otherwise, but because they loved their country and believed in its future. True, there were special NKVD units that were ordered to fire on retreating soldiers. But there was no other way, at that point. If Stalingrad would've fallen, that would greatly demoralize an entire Red Army, and cause an even greater loss of life. But by no means were soldiers thrown into battle, half-armed into their certain death. That would just be pointless, even for ruthless Russian Generals. Plus when they showed Kruschev commanding the front, I fell off my seat laughing. I can go on and on, and this would be a never-ending story, except that I don't want it to be as boring and as never-ending as the script for Enemy at the gates. Advice for people who like a little reality in their movies, don't see it. It sucks. I try to picture Private Ryan done by the same director. It just wouldn't be Private Ryan, but some stupid unrealistic war flick, sort of like U-571.
    6noralee

    A Taut, Gritty War Movie Screaming to Come Out of a Drekky Melodrama

    I went to see "Enemy at the Gates" with my husband, as I knew it was about his favorite battle of his favorite war that he watched continually on the Military Channel. After having to endure a harangue the whole way to the screen about how we would be seeing the real battle that won the war, not that inconsequential D-Day that "Saving Private Ryan" made such a big deal about as the U.S. didn't come in until the Russians already had turned the tide, I asked could he please be quiet during the movie and refrain from commenting on inaccuracies, etc. until after.

    But other than the clarification I needed between the Battle of Leningrad and the Siege of Stalingrad which I always mix up (whoops, I think I just did it again), and Hitler's and Stalin's fallacies as military leaders in relation to the symbolic importance of the Volga (and the movie could have used more strategic explanations), he and I pretty much agreed about the movie.

    There's a taut, gritty war movie screaming to come out of a drekky melodrama. The best parts are the battles, of troops and individuals. The opening sequence of soldiers thrown from trains to boats to the front line is terrific and frightening.

    The one-on-one between Ed Harris's Nazi sharpshooter and Jude Law's hunter (though he doesn't do working class too convincingly) is exciting.

    The most captivating surprising is Bob Hoskins as Krushchev. He completely inhabits the character and brings him completely to blood and guts life - showing just what it takes to survive as a top man to Stalin.

    There was also more potential in Joseph Fiennes' political officer as insight into propaganda that is only occasionally effective (after all, "Ryan" was similarly about a PR stunt).

    I thankfully dozed off during most of the ridiculous sub-plot of the love triangle. There appears to be only a couple of women living in this city, and they sure do get in the way, as these few can themselves provide multi-lingual translations, sex, food, lousy child care and brave sharpshooting.

    The music by James Horner is atrociously bombastic, wincibly so.

    (originally written 3/31/2001)
    Spleen

    Uh, guys, there's a war on

    No doubt the title is an indication of what the film would LIKE to be about. The Germans forces were indeed "at the gates" - they are on the verge of capturing Stalingrad, they would lay siege to Leningrad, and at one point even Moscow appeared to be in danger. The situation was desperate. But after we're told all this, the position of the German army turns out to have no more to do with the story than the position of the sun in the zodiac. After a bitter, violent battle over - well, we're never told - nothing of a military nature happens again. Not even offstage. (Until the end, when, after a brief "offensive" of unfathomable significance, an epilogue tells us that the Germans were repelled from after all.) All the action in Stalingrad freezes so that we can watch a protracted duel between a Russian and a German sniper.

    Now I'm prepared to believe that snipers played a valuable role in this kind of warfare - I wouldn't know - but Vassili's primary value, we must assume in the absence of information to the contrary, is as propaganda - a means of keeping up the morale of the local troops. But there's something circular here. The snipers are the only people we see doing any actual fighting, and by the end of the film they seem to be devoting all their efforts to shooting a German sniper who is in turn doing nothing but trying to shoot Vassili. What does ANY of this have to do with, you know, the invasion?

    The fact that the troops of a hostile foreign power are on Russian soil (they haven't yet been defeated, and it looks to be only a matter of time before even Moscow would be overrun) doesn't seem to motivate the characters to do much. Nobody makes a single decision for the good of the war effort as a whole. Danilov builds up the Vassili legend because of personal feelings and is ready to tear it down later for other personal reasons; Tania wants to kill Germans - kill them herself, by hand, rather than help her fellow soldiers as best she can by working in intelligence - because they killed her parents; Danilov tries to transfer her to a safer job not because that's where she should be (it's a mere coincidence that that IS where she should be), but because he's hitting on to her; Vassili's heart isn't in the duel with the German sniper until he has a casual acquaintance's death to avenge. When Sacha's mother is told that her son is a traitor (now serving the forces who have bombed the city she grew up in to rubble), her only reaction is, "Perhaps he'll be safer with them than with us." Wherever we look, we see dreary personal concerns. Did any of these people notice that the enemy IS at the gates?

    If Anaud was trying to make his characters more plausible by making them pettier, he failed. When Sacha tells a third party what we supposedly already know - that Tania is in love with Vassili - it came as news to me. I hadn't seen any insipient love anywhere. I suppose I ought to have worked it out, by assuming that the single female character must be there to fall in love with someone and using a process of elimination to work out who it was (she plainly didn't care for one of the two candidates, therefore she must be head over heels with the other one), but really, even in a movie as dull as this, I have better things to do.
    8A_Different_Drummer

    brilliantly flawed ... is still brilliant

    In the grand tradition of Old Hollywood, this international co-production seeks to frame the key battle of WW2 (the REAL key battle, not the ones from the John Wayne movies) as a morality tale involving a love triangle.

    It is a bold idea, and beautifully executed.

    In fact an argument could be made -- and I will make it -- that any flaws in the execution (it lags a bit here and there) are the result of the film-makers' "reach exceeding their grasp" and they attempted too much, more than one film could ever accomplish.

    But what a film it is! You viewer feel as though you are there, making history. The four stars involved have, each of them, never given a bad performance in their careers and they surely maintain their records here.

    Ed Harris in particular -- although he has less screen time -- will always to this reviewer seem a vastly under-rated actor. (This review written in 2017 where an older Harris still uses his charisma in a defining role for HBOs Westworld .... and nails it.) Recommended? Absolutely! In the Metacritic data that IMDb so helpfully provides I could not help but notice one reviewer commenting that, well, it sure isn't in the same class as SAVING PRIVATE RYAN.

    Which is the irony of doing film reviews. I have never not once thought of wanting to see SAVING PRIVATE RYAN again, but this film is one I like to revisit every few years. Magnificent.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Jude Law and Ed Harris were cast largely on the expressiveness of their eyes. They were frequently called to convey emotion without saying a word.
    • Goofs
      In the scene where Vassili is lighting the cigarette butt he picked up from the German sniper, it's apparent by the flame he uses a butane lighter. Butane lighters were not invented until the 1950's.
    • Quotes

      Commisar Danilov: I've been such a fool, Vassili. Man will always be a man. There is no new man. We tried so hard to create a society that was equal, where there'd be nothing to envy your neighbour. But there's always something to envy. A smile, a friendship, something you don't have and want to appropriate. In this world, even a Soviet one, there will always be rich and poor. Rich in gifts, poor in gifts. Rich in love, poor in love.

    • Crazy credits
      The end credits are slanted and curved.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: The Mexican/Enemy at the Gates/See Spot Run (2001)
    • Soundtracks
      La Chanson des Artilleurs
      Music by Tikhon Khrennikov

      Lyrics by Viktor Gusev

      (C) Musikvertag Hans Sikorski, Hamburg

      Performed by The Red Army Choir (as Les Choers De L'Armee Rouge)

      Courtesy of 7 Productions, Paris

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    FAQ22

    • How long is Enemy at the Gates?Powered by Alexa
    • Is this film historically accurate?
    • We are used to seeing long distance shootings in films about snipers, and Enemy At The Gates is no exception. But Stalingrad was a dense ruin. How did sniper battles really work there?
    • What is the significance of the two crosses/ribbons Ed Harris' character changes nearing the end of the film?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 14, 2001 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Germany
      • United Kingdom
      • Ireland
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Languages
      • English
      • German
      • Russian
    • Also known as
      • Stalingrad - Enemy at the Gates
    • Filming locations
      • Bavaria, Germany
    • Production companies
      • Paramount Pictures
      • Mandalay Pictures
      • KC Medien
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $68,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $51,401,758
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $13,810,266
      • Mar 18, 2001
    • Gross worldwide
      • $96,976,270
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 11 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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