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Stalingrad

Stalingrad

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Director: Joseph Vilsmaier
Actors: Dominique Horwitz, Thomas Kretschmann, Jochen Nickel, Sebastian Rudolph, Dana Vavrova
Studio: Fox Lorber
Category: DVD

List Price: $34.98
Buy New: $12.67
You Save: $22.31 (64%)

Qty 17 In Stock


New (31) Used (11) Collectible (1) from $12.49

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 185 reviews
Sales Rank: 3812

Format: Color, Dolby, Dvd-video, Letterboxed, Subtitled, Widescreen, Ntsc
Languages: English (Original Language), German (Original Language), English (Subtitled)
Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Number Of Items: 1
Running Time: 150
Aspect Ratio: 1.66:1
DVD Layers: 2
DVD Sides: 1
Picture Format: Letterbox
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.3 x 0.6

MPN: D5036D
ISBN: 6305037280
UPC: 720917503622
EAN: 9786305037286
ASIN: 6305037280

Theatrical Release Date: 1992
Release Date: November 3, 1998
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: BRAND NEW, Factory Sealed items direct from the Studios. 30 Day Satisfaction Guarantee. Quick International Airmail!

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 41-45 of 185
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5 out of 5 stars EXCELLENT WAR MOVIE!!!   September 25, 2004
 12 out of 15 found this review helpful

This movie is more "drama" than action. It is almost similar as "Saving Private Ryan". The soryline is truly sad and the end will leave you thinking about all those poor German soldiers that were victims of a senseless, cruel, and devastating war. This a movie from a German perspective. That's right, also Germans did suffer tremendously under that evil and insane dictator, Hitler. I highly recommend this film because it will take you back to WWII, and will make you feel like a miserable, frustraded, and troubled soldier obligated to fight for the ruthless so called "Fuhrer".


4 out of 5 stars Total Anihilation   July 27, 2004
 13 out of 14 found this review helpful

This moving German film on the decisive battle of Stalingrad is a stunning portryal of the abysmal defeat Germany's 6th Army suffered at the hands of Soviet forces in 1943. A battle that cost almost 2 million lives and acted as the turning point in WWII. Released before 'Saving Private Ryan', this film has some of the most visually moving and horrid war scenes I have ever seen.

The film's scenes and plot do an excellent job at portraying how the German army progressed from gleaming confidence to utter dissillusionment and despair in their campaign on the Eastern Front. Overjoyed at the German army's major victories in the Eastern Front, Hitler is convinced the he now has sufficient forces to crush the Red Army and take the oil fields to the South needed to fuel the German war machine while simultaneously cutting off Russia's main fuel supply. Maniacally deluded that victory is certain, Hitler commits the 6th and 4th Armies towards seizing the city. Under high attrition, the Germans drive the Soviets across the Volga but the arrival of Winter literally freezes any further offensive. Leaving Winter to faithfully fight the Great Patriotic War for Mother Russia as it did with Napoleon and his Grande Armee in 1812, the Soviets add to the suffering by launching an unexpected counter offensive in which a break is made against the Romanian army leading to a complete envelopment of the city and the 6th Army with the destruction of the 4th Panzer Army. Trapped, General Paulus is absurdedly promoted by Hitler to the rank of field marshall in hope that he would not break the record of no German field marshall having ever surrendered. Paulus and the 6th are then ordered to fight to the death and not to yield one meter to the Soviets. Abandoned by Hitler and any hope of relief, the 6th Army deteriorates into a motley of starving and frostbitten soldiers defending themselves mostly with booby traps and snipers while scavaging for scraps. Discarded as traitors by Hitler and told to fight to the end, the 6th Army that had started with over 190,000 men was reduced to only 90,000 soldiers who surrendered in January 1943: only 6000 of them returned alive from brutal Soviet captivity to tell their tale after the war. The film focuses on the lives and characters of a platoon and their experiences. Full of hope, pride, and arrogance as they leave Italy in the beginning, the audience sees the characters deteriorate into little more than frightened animals seeking safety from the wrath of the enemy and the unforgiving winter conditions. The movie has some distortions as to the common perceptions held by German soldiers as to their role in the Third Reich's army but this is to emphasize the issue of conscience, to present the characters as sympathetic, and to create plot tension. As is typical with many WWII movies, there is the stereotypical amoral Nazi hardline party member to act as a counterpoint. These narrative/cinematic techniques are not too obtrusive in this film though and don't erode the impact of the movie. This movie is far better than 'Enemy At The Gates' which covers the same battle. It's not innundated with cliche dialogue and stereotypical Hollywood portrayals of Soviets or Germans. The closing scene has to be the grimmest ending I have seen in any war film.

The film remains a sober drama and brings the full impact as to the horrible conditions German and Soviet soldiers fought under in that fateful battle that would be the turning point of WWII giving the initiative to the Allies for counter-offensive maneuvers. As with Napoleon's defeat to Tsar Alexander I, the German defeat at Stalingrad stands as one of the greatest catastrophic defeats suffered in military history. In terms of the cost of lives and human suffering, it is probably the worst of any in history along with the fall of Leningrad. So intensive was this battle that certain parts of the city never saw snow due to the massive artillery barrage launched by the soviets in the confined sector of the surrounded 6th Army. So horrid was the winter that even oil would freeze rendering firearms, artillery, and motor parts useless after prolonged exposure. So desperate were all involved that many were forced to cannibalism for survival. This movie portrays these morbid and pitiful conditions in perfect detail. This is definitely not a movie for children or the faint of heart but I strongly recommend this moving and realistic drama for those reasons.



2 out of 5 stars About as much fun as being there.   June 25, 2004
 29 out of 47 found this review helpful

"Stalingrad" is the most depressing film I've ever seen. Mind you, I didn't think a story about the death of 260,000 German soldiers would be as uplifting as, say, "The Sound of Music" but this movie pulls out all the stops in an effort to leave the viewer a quivering, glassy-eyed emotional pulp.

Made by the same producers who gave us the seminal "Das Boot" I found it not in that league. The film is overlong, sterotypical, and spends too much time cramming postwar German conscience pangs down the viewer's throat. Moreover, the last hour or so reminds me of those interminable scenes from "Born on the Fourth of July" that seem more interested in punishing the audience than advancing the story. The battle for, and siege of, Stalingrad, was no doubt an experience of horror and misery beyond the power of words or images to describe it, but what I was hoping for here was a German version of "Saving Private Ryan" -- high on combat and confusion, short on moralizing. Unfortunately, all postwar German cinema is filtered through the same revisionist political opinions; this explains why all German war movies inevitably leave you with the feeling like you've been punched in the stomach or clubbed over the head. After about an hour I was hoisting my own flag of surrender; but the pummeling continued.

The scene at the airfield, for example, when the wounded men are trying desperately to get out on the last transports, is very hard to watch. From what I've read, however, it seems that discipline in the Stalingrad pocket was maintained until the bitter end, and the airfield scene may more resemble how the producers of the film wanted history to unfold rather than the actual way it did. In fact, the 90,000 men who lived to surrender (all but 5,000 of whom died in captivity) did so only when they were completely out of fuel, medicine, and ammunition, and had no other means to resist; but the producers, of course, permit to trace of pride in military accomplishment to enter into their film.

Most American movies and television portray the Germans in World War II as heel-clicking cartoon idiots ("I know nutink! Nutink!"). Most German war movies portray the Germans as either villainous martinet Nazis, or cynical disbelievers who carry arms only for Germany and not for Hitler or the Party. In fact, the record shows that the Germans overwhelmingly trusted Hitler and were deeply inspired by his ideology. It is this fact, and not what was done in the name of National Socialism, that seems to sit very hard in the modern German stomach.


1 out of 5 stars What's my motivation to buy this dvd?   June 15, 2004
 24 out of 31 found this review helpful

Why does this dvd have an english (dubbed) soundtrack only. It was obviously made in german (like Das Boot), so why no german soundtrack available? Surely some people would prefer to watch the film in the original german soundtrack with english subtitles. But no subtitles either! What were the people who compiled this dvd thinking! Why not include the original soundtrack. Surely this was available.
One of the best parts of the film, a scene showing the platoon listening to a speech by Hitler (the actual recording) over an improvised radio, also has no subtitles! So good luck to anyone who would have been interested in knowing what the speech was about.

If ever there was a film that could benefit from rudimentary features like a choice of language or subtitles - this is it.

Probably one of my favourate war films. Probably the worst DVD in my collection.


5 out of 5 stars The way war should be shown : Vivid and Horrifying   February 10, 2004
 8 out of 10 found this review helpful

I had never heard of this film untill I spotted this DVD out of the corner of my eye in the store and bought it, and I am glad I did. This movie has surpassed any previous depiction of the stress and hardship's that the common soldier and civilian alike faced in WW2 that I have ever seen and I felt this is also the first war movie to take the glory out of battle and replace it with the truth "war is hell".

I like many other reviewer's here have seen the endless stream of documentories about stalingrad and have heard the accounts from veteran's of the battle and about the horror and suffering that wen't on, but I feel that the word's and tear's from these veteran's never quite sunk in. After seeing this movie I feel like the pain that was depicted has allowed the words of these veteran's to finnally sink in and I have a new understanding of just what these men had endured...and yet I feel like I still dont know the whole truth.

This film has a permanent home in my collection....I only regret that this movie was not embraced by the U.S. film industry and shown to a wide audience a long time ago....I recommend that anyone who is fan of war movie's or just curious about the war that changed the world.... this is a movie that you cannot pass up seeing.

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