Stalingrad (TV Mini Series 2003– ) Poster

(2003– )

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8/10
The turning Point
MikeyB17934 September 2011
A very visceral documentary on the Battle of Stalingrad which marked a crucial turning point of World War II. It has interviews with several German, but less Soviet, participants.

There are three parts: the prelude where the Germans invade the city, the "Kessel" (cauldron), and the final surrender and its aftermath. This was a total and brutal war and we are provided with film and interview footage that substantiates this. Also much of what is said, is also found in the book "Enemy at the Gates" by William Craig (don't confuse this with the rather romantic movie version made a few years ago). For instance Craig's book also describes the part about German soldiers desperately hanging onto the wings of airplanes leaving the besieged city.

Some of the soldiers interviewed break down due to the overwhelming nature of the experience they endured. Post-traumatic stress disorder not only affects soldiers just returning from war– it is something that scars for life – most of these veterans were in their 70's and 80's. It was important to get these interviews – these participants are a non-renewable resource and their stories needed to be recorded for future generations to comprehend the horrible scope of this war.

Even though this is a German-made documentary, I was hoping for more interviews with Soviet participants. Admittedly there are some Soviet interviews and I would have liked more about how the civilian population of Stalingrad experienced the war. There is substantially more on German military tactics – for instance there is almost as much about the failed attempt by Manstein to relieve the beleaguered troops as there is about the Soviet encirclement. Also it is mentioned a few times during the documentary that of the 200,000 German troops taken prisoner in February, 1943 less than 10,000 returned after the war (many in the 1950's). It must never be forgotten that the German took prisoner over 5 million Soviet soldiers during the invasion that began in June, 1941. Of these, less than 10 percent survived – many starved to death from neglect. To the documentaries credit a few of the German soldiers state that they knew what to expect when they were to surrender to the Soviet troops, for they had seen first-hand what was happening in German occupied territory.

Regardless, this is a devastating documentary that shows the terrible truths of total war – it extinguishes any illusions about the "Glory of Battle". In the "World at War" documentary episode on Stalingrad a Russian comments: "These German soldiers are a funny lot with their shiny black boots attacking Stalingrad - did they think they were on a joy-ride?"
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8/10
moving
michaelmolenaar16 April 2006
I saw this docu several years ago and until this day I have never seen a better documentary. Detailed reports with many survivors, Russian as well as German and even civilians who still lived in Stalingrad during this terrible battle.

The true power of this documentary are the survivors. When a certain German soldier told his story how he was able to get out of this hell on earth (wounded) he told it with so much heart and soul when he cried, I cried.

This may sound silly but it moved me in a way a docu never had done before. It puts back the Humans in the story... not just The Evil Germans or The Brave Russians (as seen in many documentaries) no it shows the human horror, the pain, the hunger the sorrow...

If you have the chance to see it DO IT... I was lucky because the Dutch TV broad casted this 3 part masterpiece. And if anybody knows where I could get in (in the Netherlands) PLEASE HELP ME OUT. I want to show parts of this when I become a teacher(2 more years of school)THNX ! And to all the survivors who worked on this: Thank you for shedding a (your) human light on this horrible war which, I see daily, many children forget or don't care about anymore, this makes a difference.
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8/10
Majectic city as WWII wears down.
michaelRokeefe7 January 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Stalingrad named so by supreme leader of Russia Joseph Stalin, for his personal favorite city on the Volga River. STALINGRAD appeared on TV as a three episode documentary. A definite stark look at World War Two as it was dragging to an end. This 156 minute documentary features newsreel footage, military footage from both sides and films from actual soldiers of the war. Interviews with survivors of that war at times is heartfelt. The city was picked by a delusional Adolph Hitler as he saw the capture of Stalingrad as the possible crowning event to his victory in the war. The ego-maniacal leader had little concern that his German 6th Army was running out of fuel and food. Tanks were running out of fuel withing sight of the city. These soldiers were already starving before they managed to cross the Volga. The battle raged for about six months finally concluding in February of 1943. At one time the Nazis controlled 90% of the city, but a tenacious throng of Soviet defenders managed to surround the 6th Army that finally quit fighting all together for Hitler. No help was coming and there was little regard from Hitler, believing that his troops should be steadfast with willpower as they took part in one of the bloodiest battles on the Eastern Front. A bombed-out city was not about to be taken by the Germans.
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10/10
Riveting
chris-sedition5 October 2010
First, I'll just get a few short comings of this work out of the way.

(a) It helps if you know something about the battle before watching this documentary. You -might- feel a little lost in the bigger-picture sense without such knowledge.

(b) Those looking for an in-depth military analysis of the battle should look elsewhere. This film is brilliant in its ability to capture the experience of war, not the theory behind it. Hence, there are not a lot of maps, etc. in this movie.

(c) Sometimes the film can be a but redundant.

So, now that all of that is out of the way, on to the good stuff. What really makes this film shine is the first-person accounts by people who were actually there, and lived through it. Both ex-German and Russian soldiers are interviewed, along with Russian civilians. It is said that a soldier only really experiences war in the 1000 feet that is around him. If that is true, then this film is a horrifying, moving, and amazing account of those 1000 feet. It also abuts the historical-drama movie by the same name. The two are really worth watching in tandem. This is a bottom-up account of Stalingrad that illuminates the experiences of the common foot soldier, which is often a story not heard from the German side of things. I really feel this is "must see" for anyone with even a remote interest in WWII.
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10/10
This documentary is great!!
fivestarmichael16 December 2006
Someone once said, "may you live in interesting times." I have to say I enjoy learning about World War II history because it was such an interesting time in our civilization. For someone born 35 years ago it is hard to imagine such a brutal world existed just 65 years ago. This documentary gives the viewer so much insight into the experiences of those caught in such a historic moment.

Stalingrad was a turning point in the tide of World War II. The director, producers and writers went to great lengths to find people to tell their stories of war. This documentary is sad and wonderful. Wonderful? Because everyone can and should learn something about this moment in history. It says so much about humanity.

If the producers read this... someone should do a documentary on Paulus. I want to know what became of him after the war.
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Very good documentary with eye witnesses
absynth1 January 2004
This documentary gives very good insight in the battle of Stalingrad, the gruesome city combat and the blockade of the sixth german army. However, it is not for history buffs or strategic experts, as it focuses on personal experiences and the stories of some of the last living participants in this turning point of the second world war.

Written by one of the precursors for popular history shows on german Network TV, Guido Knopp, the pattern for the three-part show is similar to his other releases: archive footage of the actual events is combined with testimonies of former soldiers or other participants of the war.

This gives the documentary a very personal note, with some of the german soldiers, now well in their eighties, bursting into tears while remembering their rescue from the encircled city. This first-hand report of the cruelties of war is what leaves viewers touched.

From what I know, this documentary is available in German only and is contained as an extra DVD to the 1993 movie "Stalingrad" by Joseph Vilsmair.
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10/10
Masterful
mortennoorgaard17 March 2021
I have seen it countless times, the music gives me chills, it is so masterful and gives a feeling of hopelessness and comfort in death that awaited the German forces on the Eastern front
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10/10
a moving wartime drama
donbrown-168001 September 2015
Before we had films like Saving Private Ryan, Stallingrad is widely seen as one of the most graphic wartime dramas ever made, But the amount of raw graphic battlefield carnage might have won it awards at the time, but for a lot of people it put them off because it was classified as a horror film. But if you overlook the "horror" factor and accept it for what it is then its a really great film. It still remains one of my favourite beach war dramas. You also have to take into account that when the film was made the production team were very much anti nazi. Their are no heros in this film, just soldiers ordered to defend their country fight the enemy and most of all forbidden to retreat.
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10/10
Turning Point of WW2 .... and most brutal battle of them all
dgriggs615 January 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Absolutely without a doubt this German 3-part documentary is a 10. But be FOREWARNED ... simply listening to the German 6th Army and Red Army survivors (about 80 years old in 2003) and a few citizen survivors of Stalingrad is both very upsetting and heart wrenching. But there are a lot of both pictures and film, too. By the last 2 months of this 5+ month battle (from late August 1942 to February 1943), the conditions inside Stalingrad were devastating, horrific. Incredible cold, which began in late November, lack of food and any kind of warm shelter, hopeless military situation for the Germans. Even people eating horse meat and later on dogs and even cats and at very end parts of dead PEOPLE!!!

And the UTTER stupidity of Hitler. He could have and should have given permission to his generals to withdraw the 6th Army by no later than December 1942, thus saving much of the men and equipment of the 300,000 man army that first attacked in August 1943. But he ended up sacrificing practically the entire army and IMHO sealed the defeat of his nation. From that point on the Soviets were on the offensive and the Nazis were retreating.
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6/10
A film about suffering not battle.
mta33315 March 2014
This is a conventional and limited treatment of an extraordinary subject. It is conventional in its use of film and is limited to the suffering caused by war. It is a film that deals with a battle only in a broad and almost incidental sense: Suffering is the exhaustive theme.

One film would have been adequate to see alternately survivors sat in artfully dimmed spaces emotionally and repetitively recounting suffering and footage of people on the move or killed. To make the point and lather it home we get the clichéd Volga vistas and stirring orchestral music, too.

Film should be employed innovatively (or not) to match the subject - be it suffering or the account of a siege and urban warfare. These films deal with the former blandly and little with the latter. If we are not to become inured to suffering then director's please rise to the occasion.
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7/10
Excellent overview of the crucial Stalingrad situation
Horst_In_Translation30 August 2017
Warning: Spoilers
"Stalingrad" is a German mini-series that consists of 3 episodes that run between 40 and 45 minutes at least in the German version. I think the English-language version is even a bit longer, but still nothing you couldn't watch in one sitting as in any case it will stay under the 3-hour mark comfortably. It's a historic documentary about the days of World War II of course and the crucial battle in the Soviet Union that basically decided the War in favor of the Allies and the Soviet Union. And that's why of course Guido Knopp is also on board of this small screen production as usual. Another fairly well-known name here is Sebastian Dehnhardt, who managed a decent breakthrough with 2 sports documentaries in the years after this one here. Here he was really just one of many. Anyway, I think this was a good and insightful watch from start to finish and really informative. The middle part ("Kessel") was probably the best of the entire thing as it did not only deliver convincingly in terms of interviews, old audio recordings, old video recordings etc. but also made an impact in terms of emotional situations as luckily nothing about this documentary feels staged or scripted (apart from the informative parts of course). As a whole, I quite enjoyed a watch and I can see why this one here is so much more known the the gigantic amount of other WWII documentaries and I don't think at all that many mistook this one for the feature film from a decade earlier that has the same name. I highly recommend the watch here. Go check it out.
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