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Battle for honor

Original title: Brestskaya krepost
  • 2010
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 18m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
11K
YOUR RATING
Battle for honor (2010)
Period DramaActionDramaWar

A war drama set during the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, in which Soviet troops held on to a border stronghold for nine days.A war drama set during the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, in which Soviet troops held on to a border stronghold for nine days.A war drama set during the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, in which Soviet troops held on to a border stronghold for nine days.

  • Director
    • Aleksandr Kott
  • Writers
    • Aleksey Dudarev
    • Vladimir Eryomin
    • Ekaterina Tirdatova
  • Stars
    • Aleksey Kopashov
    • Andrey Merzlikin
    • Pavel Derevyanko
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Aleksandr Kott
    • Writers
      • Aleksey Dudarev
      • Vladimir Eryomin
      • Ekaterina Tirdatova
    • Stars
      • Aleksey Kopashov
      • Andrey Merzlikin
      • Pavel Derevyanko
    • 49User reviews
    • 14Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 7 wins & 14 nominations total

    Videos1

    Fortress of War
    Trailer 2:18
    Fortress of War

    Photos44

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Aleksey Kopashov
    • Sashka Akimov
    • (as Alyosha Kopashov)
    Andrey Merzlikin
    Andrey Merzlikin
    • Kizhevatov
    Pavel Derevyanko
    Pavel Derevyanko
    • Fomin
    Aleksandr Korshunov
    • Gavrilov
    Maksim Kostromykin
    Maksim Kostromykin
    • Kolka
    Anna Tsukanova-Kott
    Anna Tsukanova-Kott
    • Sonya
    • (as Anna Tsukanova)
    Sergey Tsepov
    • Zubachev
    Benik Arakelyan
    Benik Arakelyan
    • Matevosyan
    Mikhail Pavlik
    Mikhail Pavlik
    • Vaynshteyn
    Sergey Vlasov
    Sergey Vlasov
    • Kavalyonak
    Aleksandr Sirin
    Aleksandr Sirin
    • Maslov
    Evgeniy Tsyganov
    Evgeniy Tsyganov
    • Pochernikov
    Tatyana Kamina
    • Shura Pochernikova
    Veranika Nikanava
    • Anya Kizhevatova
    Yana Esipovich
    Yana Esipovich
    • Kizhevatov's Wife
    Madlen Dzhabrailova
    • Gavrilov's Wife
    Dmitriy Kulichkov
    Dmitriy Kulichkov
    • Karelin
    Aleksandr Saptsov
    • Lieutenant Akimov
    • Director
      • Aleksandr Kott
    • Writers
      • Aleksey Dudarev
      • Vladimir Eryomin
      • Ekaterina Tirdatova
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews49

    7.410.9K
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    Featured reviews

    mikelang42

    true war story brilliantly told in epic film

    Sunday shop in Asda Superstore Brighton UK. Always look at new DVD display. Full this week of USA horror and comedy Z movies. This shop also puts new foreign films with subtitles on the display, prices reduced as the lazy Brits still can't be botherd to read a subtitled film. What a lazy bunch some of us are, all though the Norwegion sub titled fun fest that is The Troll Hunter is pulling them in here in Brighton. I digress.I like true history, this film of the heroic defence of the Brest Fortress in June 1941 was something even at my age, 70 I had never heard of.Half way through, it's 138 mins long,I halt it for a cup of tea and said out loud, Hey a real film, no bloody CIC,no American crap heroics,and boy I am looking forward to seeing the rest.In my tea break I find that this fantastic heartbreaking true war film did not even get a UK cinema release. Disgraceful.All the performances are stunning, the film looks great on the wide print. Rent this and learn what barstards the Nazis really were. Highly recommended.
    8Abominog

    I imagined the war, but I never imagined the war to be like that...

    A convincing and brutal drama about the war's ugly and scary face, which is as much poignant as it is riveting and engrossing from start to finish.

    The doomed fortress of the border town of Brest was built a hundred years before the first onset of German deceitful invasion into the Soviet land at early dawn of June 22, 1941. It had been changing hands several times before, notably in 1918 when it was surrendered to the Germans under notorious Brest Peace Treaty. It was released thereafter to the Poles, then liberated by the Red Army, then transferred to Poland again. Under the Polish administration the fortress was first affected by German air raid in 1939 and significantly damaged under the massive onslaught of the German troops.

    Before the end of 1939 the city of Brest (and its fortress) was finally incorporated into the Soviet Union. By the commencement of war, the Brest fortress was a home to a number of Soviet military units - infantry battalions, reconnaissance and artillery regiments, miscellaneous attached units and troops, all-in-all up to 8000 servicemen and several hundreds of their families, wives and children were stationed therein.

    The film starts unfolding peacefully on the eve of the war - a regular day in the lives of ordinary people in a military compound - orchestra rehearsals, dancing, shopping, kisses, Saturday evening film screening - the late peaceful everyday routine...

    Persistent rumors that the Germans were cranking up preparations for a breakthrough on the border were considered as sabotage and eventually suppressed. But anticipation of imminent disaster was intensified by a particularly creepy late night scene of the special vanguard troops disguised in Soviet military uniform disembarking from a train following subdued German language orders.

    Heavy artillery fire that all of a sudden pierced silence at the daybreak of June 22 instantly inflicted heavy human and material losses, disrupted communication, cut off power supply and destroyed military munitions. Followed by meticulously coordinated combat assault immediately afterward, it took the inhabitants by surprise and split the garrison into several relatively small and isolated pockets of nevertheless pretty fierce resistance.

    Under massive German attacks the city was defeated fairly early, whereas the small number of the besieged Brest fortress survivors with scarce resources, deprived of food, water and medicine, and with narrowing hope for reinforcement or backing from the retreating regular forces, kept on defending the small plot of Soviet land against the invaders for many days.

    Though the essence of the story is certainly a portrayal of the valor of Soviet soldiers that lost their lives defending the first citadel and symbol of Russian resistance, the film manages to avoid as much as possible worn-out heroic clichés and propagandistic pathos that were often compulsory elements even in the best examples of Soviet war movies of the past. Yet, unlike many politically engaged modern movies, it resists the temptation to deride the peculiarities of Soviet lifestyle of that time and to speculate on the popular issues of "Stalinist regime's atrocities".

    Instead, the film focuses on accurate capturing of a full range of authentic human emotions from joy, love and devotion at the early beginning of the film through angst, fear and pain as it progresses to hopelessness and despair. It tells the frightening story of regular people, which lives were turned upside down overnight when they end up face to face with unstoppable deadly force menacing their families, their loved ones, their own lives and their country.

    It pulls no punches when it comes to depiction of enormous destructions and horrors of war with first rate set designs and visually arresting special effects, but the main asset of the film is, of course, excellent nuanced performances from the entire cast especially the leads - Korshunov, Merzlikin and Derevyanko.

    The story is told as if from the perspective of a teenage boy witnessing the outbreak of war and providing narration already as a war veteran that has survived the worst war in modern history. It may be emotionally draining cinematic experience for many viewers, but I believe it could be especially conducive for the younger generation to acquire better understanding of the actual tremendous price the nation has paid for the great Victory.
    8richard6

    Momument to conflict

    Produced in honour of the Red Army soldiers defending the USSR Western borders, Fortress of War recounts historical events combined with fictitious chronicles surrounding the June 1941 siege of the Brest Fortress in Sothern Belorussia against the invading Wehrmacht Army Group Centre forces in the opening stages of Operation Barbarossa.

    This historical event is creatively accompanied by reminiscing narration from an orphaned 15-year old boy named Sasha Akimov. His narration ties together three main defensive stages led by real life Soviet war heroes centered on the resistance zones holding out against the protracted German siege. One location is headed by regiment commander Pyotr Gavrilov (Aleksandr Koshunov) another by the political commissar Yefim Fomin (Pavel Derevyanko) and lastly the head of the 9th frontier outpost, Andrey Mitrofanovich Kizhevatov (Andrey Merzlikin). All three have a different story to tell.

    The film begins in an archetypal peaceful, though nervous per-war Belorussia in the summer of 1941. The heavy military presence contained in Brest, notably its historic 19th century fortress, explains the current political situation in the country following the Nazi conquest of Western Europe and the Politburo's rightful suspicions of Hitler next intended target. The focal characters are simultaneously introduced intermediately around Sasha's observational narration. The ensuing bombardment by Wehrmacht artillery and brutal assault comes with-out warning and is unleashed with fuming panic. The film thus continues along a direction of separate combat charges and defensive manoeuvres. These numerous skirmishes and scuffles between the two opposing armies are effective, edgy and well-staged. All the combat scenes are extremely effective and mastered by the production team using special effects and pyrotechnics to their full advantage. Because the film was produced by the Belarusfilm Company and in truth many of the cast and crew either lived or parents lived through the nightmare of the Wehrmacht invasion and resultant onslaught of the population, the accuracy to detail is visually authentic and at no point attempts to introvert away from the brutality faced by their ancestral soldiers or civilians during these troubled times. Yet, it does not go unnoticeable that this film contains blotches of patriotism and benevolence. The narration shifts between characters and their dilemmas in the three separate defensive locations at the beginning may appear to be unclear and confusing. Nevertheless, through skillful editing and directing as the film moves along at a steady peace the separate stories begin to coalesce into one and by no means are a distraction.

    In summary, Fortress of War is a first-rate factual dramatised war movie which subjects its audience to the brave climatic struggle for survival and once again is another example of the evolving historical films from the Counties brutalised by ideology fuelled hatred and genocide that was the Second World War.
    8deloudelouvain

    Great East front battle movie

    War movies based on true events are always something special because you can feel the suffering and the absurdity of war. Most of World War II movies are about well known battles like Normandy, Obama Beach, The Ardennes and so on, but I prefer watching more unknown battles because they have the right to be remembered also. In this movie we get another untold story about the Soviet troops defending the Brest fortress against the German Nazi invasion. We will never know how accurate those battles are. It's a Soviet movie so it might been shot as Soviet propaganda. But the least we can say is that this movie is very well done. Not the usual goodlooking Hollywood stars playing a war hero, but actual day-to-day normal looking people, like you and me, acting in some very captivating scenes. I don't know if those actors are famous in their fatherland but they sure did a hell of a good job. Probably not with a huge budget, they still managed to make it look pretty real. The story about this East front battle is special, sometimes told with a narrating voice of a kid that survived this hell, and will certainly have your attention. After Anthropoid and Kajaki, another great war movie that won't leave you without emotion.
    9JamieWJackson

    a real, gritty gem

    I don't like reading subtitles, but I will for a particularly good movie, and this certainly is one. I also don't normally gravitate toward war movies, but again, I'll make an exception for a good one, and I give this one a 9. It might be even better than that. There is so much for the eye here; I'm very impressed at the amount of work which must have gone into making every shot look so real. Also, the soundtrack was not overwhelming; for the most part, what we see is what carries the emotion, and that is a testament to the power of the events and the quality of the reconstruction of them for this movie.

    There's a lot of violence, shooting, dying, etc. here, but not a lot of really nasty gore, which is something I appreciate. I'm sure the reality may have been even uglier than what is shown in this movie, but I don't need to see every last ounce of gore to know that war sucks and people get horribly maimed and killed. What is shown is enough to make the point well.

    Very high quality movie; strongly recommended.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Goofs
      Around time code 1h20, we see Stukas bombing the fortress. The firsts Stukas pass arrive correctly. The other Stukas have their head down and arrive on the back. Technicians have probably inverted the images.
    • Connections
      Features Les joyeux garçons (1934)

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 4, 2010 (Belarus)
    • Countries of origin
      • Belarus
      • Russia
    • Official site
      • Official site (Russia)
    • Languages
      • Russian
      • Ukrainian
      • Belarusian
    • Also known as
      • La Bataille De Brest-Litovsk
    • Filming locations
      • Brest, Belarus
    • Production companies
      • Belarusfilm
      • Central Partnership
      • TRO
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $4,569,604
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 18 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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