|
|
Stalingrad - Film Review
Previous
|
It's tempting to call this harrowing picture a World War II version of All Quiet on the Western Front: both films take the perspective of ordinary German soldiers at ground level. Stalingrad
surveys the misery of the battle of Stalingrad, the winter siege that
cost the lives of almost one and a half million people, Russian
defenders and German invaders alike. Not unlike Spielberg's approach to
Saving Private Ryan, German director Joseph Vilsmaier rarely
steps outside the action to comment on the higher purpose of the war,
assuming the audience is aware of the evil of the Nazi regime. Instead,
we simply follow a group of soldiers as they endure a series of
gut-wrenching episodes, events which have the tang of authenticity and
horror. Vilsmaier has a taste for symbolism and surreal touches, which
only add to the unsettling sense of insanity this movie conjures up so
well.
|