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enlarge | Director: Frank Wisbar Actors: Joachim Hansen, Peter Carsten, Wilhelm Borchert Category: DVD
List Price: $45.00 Buy New: $29.88 You Save: $15.12 (34%)
New (7) from $29.88
Avg. Customer Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 63578
Format: Black & White, Subtitled, Ntsc Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 97 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
UPC: 639802292599 EAN: 0639802292599 ASIN: B0000646UO
Release Date: June 15, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: DIRECT FROM THE MANUFACTURER - SAME PRODUCERS THAT MADE DIE BRUCKE (THE BRIDGE) - BRAND NEW - FACTORY SEALED - FULLY GUARANTEED - TOP TEN OF BEST WAR MOVIES - WAR/HISTORY/SWASHBUCKLING/AVIATION AND WESTERN FILMS ARE OUR SPECIALTY!!!
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| Customer Reviews:
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An excellent old war movie of the most terrible battle September 8, 2002 37 out of 38 found this review helpful
A German war movie of the late fifties recreates the encirclement, agony and destruction of the German VI Army (and part of IV panzer army) in Stalingrad. Very well recreated battle scenarios inside the city and the surroundings of the "kessel". For all those interested in this horrendous battle, a "must see" film. Black and white, German.
A low budget movie & an expensive DVD! July 31, 2002 59 out of 68 found this review helpful
Frank Wisbar weaved this tale on the Stalingrad campaign like a student of the Tolstoy school of thought with its strong emphasis on historical accuracies. Unfortunately, nearly every scene in this movie was melodrama over dramatic creativity.All the basic facts regarding what had happened at Stalingrad is here; the Romanian(Rumanian as they were called then) division's sucumb to tank fright, the city in ruins, desparate street fights(not so desparate here), the encircling of the German Sixth Army and the 4th Panzer Army's(under General Hoth) failure to reinforced it, the Luftwaffe's inability to resupply 'der Kessel' and their insignificant crates of worthless goods, the Russian winter, the German soldiers' near-starvation diet and their attempt at AWOL by clinging on to JU-52 transport planes, Hitler's indifference to the Sixth Army's doomed fate, General Paulus' unswerving loyalty to the Fuehrer's directives, Paulus' promotion to Field-Marshal hinting of suicide rather than surrender, and the Field-Marshal's last act of defiance to Hitler's orders. The acting was apathetic as characteristic in most '50s classics. So stiff were the actors' performances, don't even expect to learn the psychology of the German soldier here. But the set design was near perfect, if not a bit under-budgeted. The costume and makeup looked too flush on the depraved Germans, otherwise accurate. The military equipments remained faithful, except for the T-34/85(sans the T-34/76s from newsreel footage) that was featured prominently during the battle scenes. It hasn't been developed yet at the time of Stalingrad. But at least they didn't throw in a surplus Sherman tank in disguise with red paint seared over its white star. The DVD itself is a dissappointment. It has no special features except for the chapter selections. There is also no dual language selection. And the English subtitle was permanently burnt into the feature. Occasional grain here and there has not been cleansed. Frankly speaking, it is like a cheap direct VHS to DVD transfer. The hefty price tag is simply not justified. This DVD is most certainly fit for yard sales.
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