The Battle of Stalingrad (film)

{{short description|1949 film by Vladimir Petrov}}

{{Infobox film

| name = The Battle of Stalingrad

| image = Stalingrad 1949.jpg

| alt =

| caption = A poster of the film.

| director = Vladimir Petrov

| producer = Nikolai Dostal

| writer =

| screenplay = Nikolai Virta

| based_on = Battle of Stalingrad

| narrator = Yuri Levitan

| starring = Aleksei Dikiy

| music = Aram Khachaturian

| cinematography = Yuri Yekelchik

| editing = Klavdiya Moskvina

| studio = Mosfilm

| distributor =

| released = {{Film date|1949|05|09|Film I|1949|11|08|Film II|df=y}}

| runtime = 192 minutes (combined)

  • Film I: 98 minutes
  • Film II: 94 minutes

| country = Soviet Union

| language = Russian

| budget =

| gross =

}}

The Battle of Stalingrad ({{langx|ru|Сталинградская битва}}) is a 1949 two-part Soviet war film about the Battle of Stalingrad, directed by Vladimir Petrov. The script was written by Nikolai Virta.

Plot

=Film I=

In the Kremlin, Stalin analyzes the Wehrmacht's movements and concludes that the Germans aim to capture Stalingrad. Hitler, who believes the city is the key to final victory, orders his generals take it at all costs.

As the enemy approaches Stalingrad, the Red Army and the local population rally to defend it in bitter house-to-house combat, stalling the German advance. In Moscow, Stalin plans the counter-offensive.

=Film II=

The Wehrmacht launches a last, massive assault, intended to overwhelm the defenders of Stalingrad. As the Red Army is pushed back to the Volga, Stalin orders the commencement of Operation Uranus. The German 6th Army is encircled, and efforts to relieve the Stalingrad pocket fail. General Friedrich Paulus, ordered by Hitler to hold to the end, refuses to surrender while his soldiers starve. The Soviets close on the city, battering the German forces as they advance. After Red Army soldiers enter his command post, Paulus orders his remaining troops to surrender. The Soviets hold a victory rally in liberated Stalingrad; in Moscow, Stalin looks at a map, setting his eyes on Berlin.

Production

The film is the last of the 'Artistic Documentaries',Mira and Antonin Liehm, The Most Important Art, {{ISBN|0-520-03157-1}}. Pages 58-61. a series of propaganda epics that recreated the history of the Second World War with a Stalinist interpretation of the events.[http://www.popmatters.com/pm/feature/the-cult-of-personality/ An essay by Michal Barrett.] Like all of the other films in the genre, The Battle of Stalingrad consists mainly of battle scenes and staff meetings, reconstructing the campaign from the point of view of the soldiers and the generals, in a heroic manner fitting the state's ideology.[http://www.soviethistory.org/index.php?page=subject&SubjectID=1956cranes&Year=1956 An essay by James von Geldryn.] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081222134154/http://www.soviethistory.org/index.php?page=subject&SubjectID=1956cranes&Year=1956 |date=December 22, 2008 }}

Reception

The movie won the Crystal Globe in the 1949 Karlovy Vary Film Festival.[http://www.kviff.com/cz/o-festivalu/historie-rocniky/1949/ The 4th Karlovy Vary Film Festival – 1949.] Aleksei Dikiy, who portrayed Stalin, received the 1949 Gottwaldov Film Festival's prize, and director Vladimir Petrov won the Czechoslovak Workers' Film Festival Best Director Award. Petrov, cinematographer Yuri Yekelchik and four actors – Aleksei Dikiy, Nikolay Simonov, Yuri Shumsky and Vladimir Gaidarov – were awarded the Stalin Prize at 1950 for their role in the film.[http://www.russiancinema.ru/template.php?dept_id=3&e_dept_id=2&e_movie_id=6258 The Battle of Stalingrad in the Soviet Encyclopedia of Cinema.] (in Russian)

French critic André Bazin wrote that the film portrayed Stalin as a super-human leader, showing him planning the Soviet war effort almost on his own: "Even if we grant Stalin a hyper-Napoleonic military genius... It would be childish to think that events in the Kremlin unfolded as they are seen here."Bazin at Work, {{ISBN|0415900174}}. Page 28. Richard Taylor listed The Battle of Stalingrad as "a personality cult film".Film Propaganda, {{ISBN|1860641679}}, page 48.

Cast

References

{{Reflist}}