2:44 "...You don't have to worry about sunburn... Have you been to the desert...? I hated it... you're always sweating. You'll melt like butter. The desert is shit..!" "But the stars, they're so close... you know, Hans?"
@DudeTheGasmask8 жыл бұрын
That line teared me up big time. Great movie, not so great war.
@mariamytilene84826 жыл бұрын
Tom Jason 😱😢😢😢😢
@BaPi846 жыл бұрын
"it's to cold to cry"
@mickeychannel25595 жыл бұрын
@@BaPi84 his tear will freeze
@toatatoa4 жыл бұрын
@@DudeTheGasmask great movie because not so great war.
@Charger4258 жыл бұрын
I saw a comment today that I will always remember....... 'When we die, people say "Rest in Peace". But why can't we also Live in Peace?'
@wallnusschef13868 жыл бұрын
Charger425 We are alive
@dave26096 жыл бұрын
Because peace does not exist, and will never.
@kevincho11876 жыл бұрын
because my friend peace cant exist without blood shed peace only exist because someone died for it
@hashimsanudin94696 жыл бұрын
Very true indeed...👍👍👍
@Skysiah05036 жыл бұрын
We’re all different and share different opinions, ones that some kill over. If you truly wanted peace you’d have to tsk out the part of us that makes us human...
@o.h22023 жыл бұрын
"I can't believe he didn't cry at the end of Titanic" Him:
@adham44293 жыл бұрын
.....
@virthuss3 жыл бұрын
I mean man, say whatever you want but Fritz Reiser has been the most loyal and exemplary corporal a German officer could have had. Imagine being so loyal that your last act of war is try to cheer your officer up as he's dying in your arms while you are freezing to death.
@namelessking41463 жыл бұрын
@@virthuss bruh, this part crushed me completely. They know they are going to freeze to death, and Fritz still tries to give him comfort. Rip
@matteo14623 жыл бұрын
titanic is the best comedy after watching this
@eddieliusa3 жыл бұрын
the tragedy at Stalingrad was 4000 times worse than the titanic
@15908150503able11 жыл бұрын
To those who doesn't know German: Lieutenant Hans: The best thing about cold weather is you feel nothing, everything freezes, it is too cold to cry. Get out here Fritz, I mean it, just go! (Tears start to come out every time I see this part. Even tho death is coming close, Hans is still thinking of his comrade, his brother in combat!) The good thing about cold is......... Corporal Fritz: You don't need to worry about sunburns,ever been to desert?You'd hate it, its so hot you're always sweating
@Hampo036 жыл бұрын
2:44 "...You don't have to worry about sunburn... Have you been to the desert...? I hated it... you're always sweating. You'll melt like butter. The desert is shit..!" "But the stars, they're so close... you know, Hans?"
@eddieliusa3 жыл бұрын
aber die Sterne, die sind so nah, weißt Hans?
@dileep_j2032 жыл бұрын
;(
@AD-ym7cj2 жыл бұрын
@breaking the 4th wall like I allways start crying watching this scene and hearing the last sentence .... I remeber in cinmea, we went out on a Saturday night, starting with this movoe and wanted to go out dancing after ... but we where so sad and confused, so we just went home after this movie ...
@coyote57356 жыл бұрын
They were 1300 miles from Berlin they were never going to make it home and they knew it. Death was inevitable.
@Vdk7585 жыл бұрын
Coyote there was a 30 km distance for a breakout, but it was unlikely to happen due to how exhausted the German army was
@arifcso66334 жыл бұрын
Thanos is inevitable
@mohsinasgarali3 жыл бұрын
The German spirit.
@virthuss3 жыл бұрын
The Russian girl could have guaranteed them a decent treatment as prisoners of war, especially as one was an officer and they both helped her to break free, no counting the fact that they allowed Russians to save their wounded soldiers during the battle of Stalingrad. We don't know if she would have been considered a traitor to Russian or not and a huge part of the army surrendered in Stalingrad already, meaning they probably wouldn't have been executed.
@mohsinasgarali3 жыл бұрын
@@virthuss Stalin had given express orders to not accept those back who had surrendered or who had been captured.
@simonyip59786 жыл бұрын
There are many photos of German troops who froze to death in Russia, this gives us an idea of what they went through before finally dying.
@mikec80865 жыл бұрын
@@lovepeace9727 yeah people think since they're russian they had an easier time in the cold. In truth everyone in stalingrad was suffering.
@Feanor9163 жыл бұрын
there are also pics of frozen soviet troops in Finland.
@s.a.a.miller59483 жыл бұрын
@Rune Willem No. Not really technically the people who created The Treaty of Versailles caused it to happen because the treaty abused Germany and the land Hitler invaded in Poland was originally theirs but taken away by the treaty. If you think about it if that treaty never happened or even if WW1 never happened there is a high chance WW2 would have never happened and Hitler would have had a very low chance of rising to power.
@matthewnichols35333 жыл бұрын
Who cares
@alexiioo44283 жыл бұрын
Wow
@Perzon9 жыл бұрын
Strong ending with a very beautiful soundtrack.
@thomasb428 жыл бұрын
+Kelly Angel Burn After Lord of the Rings :)
@thomasb428 жыл бұрын
sure, but i like the lotr ending more ^^
@samsid37018 жыл бұрын
+Hans Bahnhof not a sad ending at all
@valta50635 жыл бұрын
I listen to this nearly twice a week to get the thoughts going
@artkkullanlmyor45773 жыл бұрын
Touching my soul.😭
@castairl98155 жыл бұрын
My grandad was a German soldier in the battle of Stalingrad. His arm was ripped of from artillery fire and he was captured by Russian troops. He didn’t come home to Germany until 1958.
@mohsinasgarali4 жыл бұрын
Greetings. I am researching on German history and would appreciate if you could give more inputs. I think the world needs to know the German perspective also.
@henrykaye8884 жыл бұрын
That is terrible - 15 years in prison. We never hear about that in Hollywood movies. It was terrible what was done to the Germans. At least Britain and the United States are stuffed now.
@hermanhedning42204 жыл бұрын
@@henrykaye888 what was terrible was the german invasion and their genocide of the soviet people.
@wilfriedhuthmacher41134 жыл бұрын
" He didn’t come home to Germany until 1958. 68 " But why til 1958? The last so called "ten thousand" (p.o.w.´s ) came home 1955.
@wilfriedhuthmacher41134 жыл бұрын
@@hermanhedning4220 "what was terrible was the german invasion and their genocide of the soviet people." Yes, but to keep soldiers for so many years even after the war finished is also not okay.
@CaliPatriot889 жыл бұрын
I openly wept at the ending. One of the most emotionally rending war movies I've ever seen.
@Albrecht80008 жыл бұрын
100% agree. We´re sitting in our heated living room an watch this film, I can´t (an won´t!) imagine how it was. Greets from germany
@ColonelSawyer8 жыл бұрын
According to my now deceased grandfather:"There was no Hell, there was only Stalingrad"
@javierdelvalle46248 жыл бұрын
CaliPatriot88 100%agree
@ea.fitz2167 жыл бұрын
Long live the NCR
@sovietmadness14836 жыл бұрын
CaliPatriot88 true The germans dont had equipments for the winter Or food and fuel
@TheNOMISS3 жыл бұрын
I remember seeing this movie for the first time, I had never seen German soldiers being portrayed as people, I was stunned. I'll never forget how I felt and how it opened my eyes to both sides.
@Lobos2223 жыл бұрын
Normal people also committed holocaust so...
@jaylitebmgo71892 жыл бұрын
@@Lobos222 Those were the SS though.
@Lobos2222 жыл бұрын
@@jaylitebmgo7189 That is actually incorrect. If you think that only the SS committed war crimes or were connected to the holocaust. You are in the wrong.
@jaylitebmgo71892 жыл бұрын
@@Lobos222 I didn't say Wehrmacht didn't commit war crimes, they did commit some but no comparable to the SS. However, if you are ordered to commit war crimes by a superior, you can't defy their orders otherwise you'll either get sent to penal battalions or probation units or be executed. In the Holocaust maybe there were some Wehrmacht guards but that doesn't count being ordered to guard a concentration camp as they were being ordered to. It was the head and leaders of SS fault. You can't even blame the SS tbh because some of them were just following orders.
@jaylitebmgo71892 жыл бұрын
@@Lobos222 The Germans are kind tbh if you'll compare them to the Japanese.
@gregwenneborg8805 жыл бұрын
I don’t remember who made this quote, but I remember a little part. “If at the end of a war story you feel relieved or happy, then it is not a true story.”
@wilsondb1003 жыл бұрын
I saw that on a call of duty waw review
@DeerBoy73610 ай бұрын
I guess Band of Brothers is totally fake and invalid.
@BadBoy-bt6lb9 ай бұрын
I am Russian. We remember everything. Every spring on May 9 we hold a parade of memory and victory over Nazi Germany. We remember.
@HaiNguyen-ii6bx6 жыл бұрын
the ending is very touching................. *"too cold to cry"*
@alfresco84424 жыл бұрын
The closing titles read: In the Battle of Stalingrad more than one million people died in combat, froze to death or died of hunger: Russian, Romanian, Italian, Hungarian, German and Austrian. Of the 260,000 trapped men of the 6th Army 91,000 were taken prisoner, of whom, years later, only 6,000 returned home.
@xxxxxzzzzzyyyyyy2 жыл бұрын
20+ million civilians died
@KotobKotob Жыл бұрын
they said russia did not feed this prisoner, actually they did eventhough their soldier also dies by starvation...
@Alexamenus11 ай бұрын
@@xxxxxzzzzzyyyyyy it was only 40 thousand, and they were often killed by both sides.
@ramirami39248 ай бұрын
Do not forget that tiny detail, more than one million Russian soldiers died in the Battle of Stalingrad!
@alinbogdan2179 жыл бұрын
That is why I like watching those German movies.They show us the other face of the war , not the one which is depicted by the Allies.My grandfather fought in the battle of Stalingrad .He was among the few who survive the Russian offensive north of Stalingrad and rejoin with his division.He fought from 1941 up to 1944 and survive the war only to see the Russians` revenge on the civilians.There is no word which can express my respect to these men and women who fought and died for their country.
@fancygirl37929 жыл бұрын
alin bogen same with me my grandfather was there too :( he never fourgot the madness
@BradBrassman9 жыл бұрын
+Alin Bogdan There was a chap who lived in our village in the 60's & 70's called Charlie Bunghertz who had a smallholding, lived on it, and grew vegetables for a living. He had fought at Stalingrad and was one of the ones who escaped the Russian pincer and walked home to be taken prisoner by the British and was a P.O.W. in England. Because his hometown in Germany ended up in the Russian quarter, he never went home after the war. We used to buy our veg from him and he once told my father that on the retreat from Stalingrad, they had to eat their dead just to survive. I remember him as a really nice chap who always used to have a few treats around the place for us kids, and I stopped seeing ordinary German soldiers how they were portrayed in the sixpenny war books they used to sell in the local newsagents.
@good0ldave9 жыл бұрын
+Brad Brassman What's sad is that these people spent all their lives trying to forget when they really should have written down their histories for future generations. Too many messages from the past like this are being lost in time and are gone forever.
@BradBrassman9 жыл бұрын
True enough. I often think Herman Goring should have been kept safe for what he knew, especially as other high ranking Nazis were spirited away by the U.S. for their technical expertise.
@MohsinAli-lw8zq7 жыл бұрын
Alin Bogdan Hats ofg to those millions of Germans who died without mention.
@MrStringedbean12 жыл бұрын
I love the underlining humanity in this ending. There's no good or evil, just brothers who live, fight, and die together.
@iche9373 Жыл бұрын
The Wehrmacht committed also war crimes like massacre, mass rapes etc. on civilians.
@spencerpaul3936 Жыл бұрын
What a crap. Of course there is good and there is evil. Are you denying that Nazi Germany was the perfection of evil?
@danielkick915210 жыл бұрын
I´m German,and i´m ashamed for some of the answers here ,especally when people say,that all soldiers were nazis,or that it was a war for higher reasons. my great-grandfather fought in russia and many of my relatives too. no one asked them,they were forced to fight,or had go to prison-to save there familys they do what they are forced them to do.Most of my relatives were farmers,in every letter(i have nearly over two hundreds of them from this time) they are always worry about the war,to leave their familys alone with the hard work-if they could ,they ended the war imeditly. but there was no chance as a little normal soldier. they even wrote what they have seen in russia,and about the cruel of the war,about the cold,to have no food and so on.but they even say,that they have to stop the russians before reaching the german borders,because they knew what will happend to their people caused of a war they didn`t start and never wanted.They only fought untill the end to protect their family,not for politics.... I´m sure in that time,without the knowledge we had today,or the possibility to get informations like the internet or satelite tv,we all had done the same... Sorry for my english...
@joeraza74489 жыл бұрын
Daniel Kick my grandfather fought in WW2 on the Americans side he and his platoon was ambushed by Wehrmacht forces and he was the only one who survived. He hates talking about what happened during World War 2 and i can see why..
@mattsheed96719 жыл бұрын
To me it was the man it were a man who shot archduke's nephew or cousin I forget who!
@mattsheed96719 жыл бұрын
+Eryk Pyts to me the young Serb gun shots from his BROWNING pistol was a start towards ww1 we all know the rest.
@jakem1tanker9 жыл бұрын
+Daniel Kick Some people just dont know history you can take a horse to water but you cant make him drink
@Faber97229 жыл бұрын
+Daniel Kick Das Problem , mein Freund , liegt auch beim Sprache Lernen; wenn die Leute wirklich wüßten,was der gewöhnliche Deutsche, der Alltagsdeutsche wirklich vor den Massakern fühlte, würden sie ganz Meinung ändern, aber sie wollen kein Deutsch lernen und so treffen sie wirkliche Schwierigkeit, beim Verständnis der Wirklichkeit der anderen Völker
@bunnyfreakz3 жыл бұрын
Hollywood movies : War is glorious German / Russian movies: War is hell.
@dwinaS753 жыл бұрын
Точно! Я знаю два фильма, которые не дадут покоя. "Иди и смотри" и " Сталинград" .
@usul5732 жыл бұрын
Spielberg films tend to be an upgrade at least, he's Jewish and wants to show how absolutely horrific the war was on everyone and he tries to get it right.
@THEGATESAREOPENED7 күн бұрын
The new Russian Stalingrad is almost like a Hollywood movie. Slow motion with "epic scenes". Their movies from cold war are better.
@Violinist_PL8 жыл бұрын
0:58 - that music is unbelievable great
@trager89334 жыл бұрын
Yea ww1 and ww2 media go togheter with classical songs. Its just hard to explain.
@jamesm.382911 ай бұрын
@@trager8933 Films just go with classical music naturally.
@jeffreyhunt51386 жыл бұрын
I rented this very good movie for the very first time back in the mid 1990's at one of the old Blockbuster stores not long after it was released to home video. It was in German with English subtitles. It was one of the few movies that made me cry. Especially in this ending scene when the last of the band of soldiers we had accompanied through the horror that was the conflict at Stalingrad, died and we the viewers who were right there alongside them through it all, from beginning to end, were the only survivors. It makes me shiver to think of it even now all these years later. As an American, I should have been thinking the Germans got what they deserved here and throughout the rest of the war. They after all were the enemy. The evil ones that we had to vanquish. But I couldn't think or feel that. Instead, I realized the men in the feldgrau uniforms and all too familiar coal scuttle like helmets (That we use now), really were no different than the men on our side. Thrown into a hell not of their own choosing, filled with pain, death and human suffering. At that level, ideology isn't even a thought. Rather just surviving the carnage and getting back to ones home and family is the ideology. And while we say today they could have disobeyed orders and said "I'm not going," that really wasn't an option. For their side or for ours. The enemy face of war is exactly the same as our own. It's exactly the same miserable slaughter. War is hell and something to be avoided, no sought. The only good thing about war is indeed its ending.
@violentscorl6976 жыл бұрын
Jeffrey Hunt Thank god there’s other people who got this movie‘s message. There is no good or bad in war.
@antoniolazarolimasampaio67314 жыл бұрын
É por aí... É isso mesmo...
@shanemccormack20734 жыл бұрын
It made them chill to apparently. Funny how we peaple can watch something and then a lot of times. Us a word that would be primoreial thinking.
@azazel57013 жыл бұрын
War is hell it doesn't matter if its the enemy or friendly, there will be casualties on both sides and great losses
@jasonmussett21292 жыл бұрын
Jeffrey Hunt. I totally agree. As a WW2 historian I am more then aware of the horrors of the Eastern Front and the atrocities committed by both sides. When I first watched this movie I looked beyond these crimes and saw the men in the uniform. To be thrown into this living hell with no way out, knowing you will never see home again, what a terrible situation to be in. This movie looks beyond the nationality, there is no glamour in war for any side just misery, grief, suffering and dirt. I have watched this film countless times and it always brings me to tears. All these men were brothers in arms fighting for an evil regime who cared nothing for their lives. We must all make sure such a terrible war never happens again.
@MarcusStarkiller10 жыл бұрын
It is so sad that there are still countless people left out in the Russian wilderness, frozen in time.
@crazyzombiebos77785 жыл бұрын
John Bandow ya it really is. I know I’m four years late to reply but they’re still someone that froze delivering bread, someone who was transporting ammo and collapsed from exhaustion and people they these men that just died in the movie.
@Sergio1000000able5 жыл бұрын
One question: how did they get there?
@kidofsteel03624 жыл бұрын
They still find hundreds of skeletons some with their helmets still on every year. I just watched it on the 75th anniversary of Stalingrad on KZbin
@mohsinasgarali4 жыл бұрын
It is sad. Damn war.
@PauloPereira-jj4jv4 жыл бұрын
@@Sergio1000000able ... did you see the movie? They were running away. From the city.
@liberatetutemeexinferis59028 жыл бұрын
Not that many war movies can really touch your very soul as this one. One of the saddest endings ever.
@Pruczepol8 жыл бұрын
This is the only movie I've ever watched that's made me actually cry. This is definently my favorite war movie, and truly a sad one.
@rocco... Жыл бұрын
Try watching Hachi. It will be the 2nd movie that made you cry.
@Genesivare Жыл бұрын
I recommend watching another great war movie made in Germany, namely "Das Boot".
@Heyiya-if8 жыл бұрын
I think it was 16 years ago I saw the full movie. I think it is the saddest movie I have ever watched, the only possible competitor would be Das Boot. And I never ever ever forgot that ending. Ever.
@bagonwali8 жыл бұрын
same makers
@mohsinasgarali4 жыл бұрын
Same here these two are best war movies ever made.
@swedisheinherjer6 жыл бұрын
At least they didn't die alone... I can't even imagine sitting there, with one of your friends freezing to death in your lap. And also knowing that you are the next in line... Poor souls :(
@blitzblutz4 жыл бұрын
Hitler should have visited Canada first, and tried walking from Toronto to Ottawa, in the winter. He would never have sent men into Russia then.
@endutubecensorship4 жыл бұрын
If he did that he would have gone insane from all the liberal bull$hit
@forrestgumball3 жыл бұрын
@@endutubecensorship most likely he will be walking and be like- "I'm in Canada but everyone is speaking Chinese?!"
@biggzdiggz86823 жыл бұрын
Nah, hitler literally saw conquering Russia as his “destiny”
@ajasilikonreffkmimmon9 ай бұрын
@@biggzdiggz8682A make believe destiny -Trapped German, claimed by dead winter.
@Catpetrescu6 жыл бұрын
It's sad that today so few acknowledge the immense tragedy wich was Stalingrad. The Soviets recovered 250,000 German and Romanian corpses in and around Stalingrad, and total Axis casualties (Germans, Romanians, Italians, and Hungarians) are believed to have been more than 800,000 dead, wounded, missing, or captured. Of the 91,000 men who surrendered, only some 5,000-6,000 ever returned to their homelands (the last of them a full decade after the end of the war in 1945); the rest died in Soviet prison and labour camps. On the Soviet side, official Russian military historians estimate that there were 1,100,000 Red Army dead, wounded, missing, or captured in the campaign to defend the city. An estimated 40,000 civilians died as well. Many historians classify it as the greatest battle ever fought in history.
@ramirami39248 ай бұрын
Try 1,300,000 and 1,200,000 Russian soldiers!
@rouxgreasus4 ай бұрын
It's not great at all.
@15908150503able11 жыл бұрын
I cry every time when watch this, especially at 2:19 when Lieutenant Hans says: Get out here Fritz, I mean it, just go! Even tho death is coming close, Hans is still thinking of his last remaining comrade, Corporal Fritz, his brother in combat. Corporal Fritz, gave up walking further, but stayed there with his commanding officer, his brother, together, they became part of the snow-covered land. What a heart-breaking ending!
@karaylan86268 жыл бұрын
best and realistic wwii movie with das boot . its interesting that both are german movies.
@alv4ro_esp3446 жыл бұрын
Karayılan and the undertag
@yannoe515 жыл бұрын
You must see " génération war " german film too
@valta50635 жыл бұрын
I think it also has to do with the given perspective shown in those films
@Mimon-Baraka5 жыл бұрын
Yeah no Hollywood crap like the stalingrad movie from 2014.
@canaanclb4 жыл бұрын
The Russians made that movie, not Hollywood.
@georgiamule6 жыл бұрын
The cream of German youth, far from the sunny fields of home, ground up in the human tragedy of Stalingrad, and claimed by the winter.
@DilophoMS7 жыл бұрын
Only 6000 of the 91000 German prisoners have returned home after the war. That's less than 7%.
@atilca97347 жыл бұрын
DilophoMS most died on the way to Siberia and when they got there 13 years of hard labor for those who survived
@RenegadeSamurai6 жыл бұрын
and the 91000 were what was left of the 260000 Men strong 6th Army... That makes a bit more than 2%...
@МихаилЧерников-п2т6 жыл бұрын
They were dying from starvation and tiphus upon capture, therefore extremely low survival rate
@lovepeace97276 жыл бұрын
Emmm... Germans/ Nazis killed A LOT more of soviet POWs.
@TheZINGularity5 жыл бұрын
The Stalingrad pow death rate was significantly higher than in other battles overall, by a high margin.
@eddieliusa2 жыл бұрын
The shot that lasted for longer than 40 seconds of them frozen is very strong: It shows how they're going to remain there for a very long time. Though alive at one point, their bodies probably won't even decompose and they become literal time capsules.
@Cheese477028 жыл бұрын
The only movie that made me cry.
@Fuzz827 жыл бұрын
The one war movie where you don't care about who wins or loses. Or who is a hero or a coward. You just want them to get out of that hell. But you also know that is not going to happen....
@ЮныйВертер5 жыл бұрын
Фильм очень сильный, испытал много эмоций от просмотра. Очень жаль и немцев и наших, погибших в этой войне и пострадавших от неё. Жаль что у нас сейчас не снимают хороших фильмов
@justjustice89682 жыл бұрын
100% правда, Респект вам!
@xGARIDx2 жыл бұрын
В войне нет победителей, есть лишь проигравшие.
@neffosnine2970 Жыл бұрын
@@xGARIDx - Мы победили немецких фашистов!! А ты просто хохлоскот бандеровский или куколдина обтруханная.
@asch7906 Жыл бұрын
@@xGARIDx В Украине то же самое с прошлого года. Пустая трата человеческих жизней.
@Stevexx_X Жыл бұрын
Danke für die Liebenswerte Worte mein Freund 🇩🇪❤️🇷🇺
@glassjaw20076 жыл бұрын
I remember watching this movie when i was 8, i never forgot it, it made me very sad and i did not understood why, compared to what i saw at the cinema at the time, Hollywood and happy endings, this movie was the FIRST realistically brutal slice of life that i witnessed in my young years, the sound of the snow and they just lying there being covered slowly, i mean it just so terrible and sad and a testament of how Brutal war is how pointless...i thank my father for making me watch this sad depressing story.
@gladyslustgirdle30044 жыл бұрын
A magnificent film. This, Das Boot, and The Downfall, should surely be the best films on the subject.
@almighty58393 жыл бұрын
By far one of the best war films I have seen, it gives us a feeling of not what the Germans went through but also the Russians. So many young men lost in a pointless battle very tragic and sad movie.
@Fengris10 жыл бұрын
Ich kann bis heute nicht verstehen, warum der Film keinen Oscar erhalten hat. Die Amis sollten sich mal ein Beispiel daran nehmen, wie man Anti-Kriegs-Filme dreht. Und nicht so einen Schrott produziieren wie Fury und den ganzen anderen Scheiss. Für mich ist das einer der großartigsten Filme überhaupt. Episch und lange noch nachhallend.
@SuperCookiemonser9 жыл бұрын
Because the germans are the good guys in it. That's the problem.
@Fengris9 жыл бұрын
Sorry that I need to say this, but in my opinion you are totaly wrong: There is no good and no bad in this film. There is only the reflection of war reality in behavior and experiences in soldiers and the internal conflict, every individual soldier has to deal with on its own. That this is shown from the german soldiers perspective makes no difference.
@SuperCookiemonser9 жыл бұрын
Fengris I know, but the germans get not to be portryed as evil racist slaughters. You know that DAs Boot was not to be filmed int he USa ebcause ti did not show the germans as evil guys? The americans watned SS officers shhoting sailors in life boats. That's waht I meant, germans are not evil enough in the movie.
@Fengris9 жыл бұрын
Got it and agree with you. One more reason why this film is so important from my point of view. It shows that also the german soldiers were individual human beeings.
@SuperCookiemonser9 жыл бұрын
Fengris But we lost the war, so we are the evil guys. You know what kind of education we get about WW2 here? That it is our fault and only our fault and that we have to feel bad for hit. Forever. And being patriotic as a german is the same as being a nazi, and being a patriot, or nazi in other words, isolates you.
@MySerpentine9 жыл бұрын
And everybody died :(
@realvelikiman19874 жыл бұрын
Rollo may have lived
@bracket39354 жыл бұрын
@@realvelikiman1987 Maybe, hope at least one of them did, but he most likely didn't make it as a POW plus he had a cough
@tommyvercetti94345 жыл бұрын
The tone in which every war movie should end.
@genoob58432 жыл бұрын
Facts. Literally no one won during the Great World Wars, everyone lost something valuable to them in a way or two.
@234jari23413 жыл бұрын
The best movie EVER!! No doubt about that, Hollywood can't remake this it is just not possible. To all the soldiers that fought, died or got wounded during the battle of Stalingrad are heroes and deserve respect in eternity. No matter what country you fight for you will always be remembered as the heroes of that moment, that battle.
@Lado9092 жыл бұрын
I conflicted , these men fought for a nation that would’ve gladly saw my people slaughtered like pigs, yet they died a miserable death that no man should die of.
@RoommatefromHell5 жыл бұрын
Man, this Movie gets me every time I watch it. That dialogue in the end, in combination with this beautiful soundtrack... I can only recommend everyone who hasn’t watch this movie to watch it!
@thelux85396 жыл бұрын
4:27 "In the Battle of Stalingrad, more than a million people died. They either froze or starved to death. This included Russians, Romanians, Italians, Hungarians, Germans, Austrians. Of the 260,000 trapped soldiers from the German 6th Army, 91,000 were captured. Only 6,000 of them returned later to their homes."
@RenegadeSamurai6 жыл бұрын
about 2% of the 260000 Men made it back Home...2%...
@thelux85396 жыл бұрын
@@RenegadeSamurai it's really sad
@blockmasterscott4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for translating that! I was wondering what it said.
@psisky7 жыл бұрын
I can cry just watching a few seconds of this. All those poor men were some mother's wee babies.
@Ayax150313 жыл бұрын
I love this ending. the German side of the war is also sad and heartbreaking.
@tomservo53472 жыл бұрын
Some of my German family visited back in 1977-one of them a veteran of Russia and the Afrika Korps. My GI Dad asked him about Russia and all he said was "Sehr, sehr kalt."
@xxxxxzzzzzyyyyyy2 жыл бұрын
"Whoever comes to Russia with a sword, will die by the sword! " Alexander Nevskiy, year of 1242
@Ironicwaffle95033 жыл бұрын
Finally saw the whole movie the other day. Idk what I was expecting, but when the shot transitions to them dead in the snow it hit me
@kevinzhang90877 жыл бұрын
On the bright side: They get to die a peaceful death in the snow alone together unlike so many other soldiers who perished in a violent death.
@atilca97347 жыл бұрын
Kevin Zhang it's like they fell asleep never to wake up
@virthuss3 жыл бұрын
No plot armor, no Hollywood cliche, no hidden political message. Just the sad, realistic anti-war story of civilians and soldiers in that hell the eastern front was and during war in general. In top of being an excellent movie. One of these few movies, with Tuntematon sotilas, Das Boot, Schindler's List, Come and See or the series The Pacific, generation war and Band of brothers , that can be excellent without having to use anachronism, CGI fest, political correctness and so on.
@goorming4 жыл бұрын
still one of the saddest endings in a movie ever
@Burningwhisky963 жыл бұрын
when i saw this movie i was so bond with the characters i truly cried at the end, it broke my heart to know this was a reality for allot of soldiers in those days, we cant imagen when they went trough, im sitting here guilty typing this with a hot stove next to my feet...
@kylekalashnikov12125 жыл бұрын
This and Friedhelms death in generation war are the only two scenes in movie history that has made me, a grown man cry like a baby
@kllk12ful5 жыл бұрын
The worst thing about Friedhelm's death not only did he die three days before the end of the war not only did he leave Wilhelm his big brother an only child he robbed Wilhelm of being able to work through his trauma with the one person who would be able to understand him his little brother and Friedhelm's death meant that Viktor and Charly not only lost their best friend but the closest thing they had to a little brother and that fact just DESTROYS me whenever I dwell on it
@asch7906 Жыл бұрын
80 Jahre sind vorbei.. Ruhet in Frieden, Soldaten der 6. Armee.
@سليمآنآلعبسي-ل8ذ Жыл бұрын
😥
@overcastandhaze11 жыл бұрын
The best thing about the cold.. is that you don't feel anything. Everything freezes. It's too cold to cry. Get out of here, Fritz. I mean it. Go! The best thing about the cold is.. you don't have to worry about sunburn. Ever been to the desert? You'd hate it. It's so hot. you're always sweating. You think you're melting, like butter.
@mindomanshortyseven65084 жыл бұрын
This brings tears tooo my eyes, That would be you or me for a fellow soldier, respect the fallen, enough love from Essex England xxxxxxx
@linapleachimPL3 жыл бұрын
I'm crying...
@eyey99904 жыл бұрын
Rest In Peace, Soldiers of the Sixth Army
@rb11794 жыл бұрын
Not many months before this battle, the Germans were marching triumphantly, shattering all Russian resistance, smiles all around. Little did they know that Stalingrad would be their grave and the beginning of the end of their Germany.
@jamesm.382911 ай бұрын
Not the point of the movie at all...
@OlgaNovakauskiene9 жыл бұрын
*Stalingrad* (1993) final scene Frost was 40- 45 *C ,,,,, Thank you
@ydoemanimagiraffe37196 жыл бұрын
Here the thing, hitler ordered them to attack during winter. WASNT THERE DECISION it is sad that millions of lives were lost over that choice
@mohsinasgarali6 жыл бұрын
@Dušan Janek If things had been planned better and there was no support of West to Stalin Soviet Union would have been severely cramped by Germans.
@LearnGuitarBristol5 жыл бұрын
@@ydoemanimagiraffe3719 The attack on Stalingrad began in August. Not winter
@kllk12ful5 жыл бұрын
Barbarossa was in June of '41 not Winter of '41
@internetstrangerstrangerofweb3 жыл бұрын
@@ydoemanimagiraffe3719 that’s technically false. In 1942 there were no major winter offensives, as, naturally, the Russians attacked during that period. You must be confusing it with the offensive of 1941, which was actually against Hitler’s wishes. Guderian had overlying command of that whole op. Hitler however did refuse the Wehrmacht the ability to retreat in 1942, which is why things ended so badly for them.
@WarbossR0kt00fSant0s4 жыл бұрын
Depressing indeed. What's left of the unit led by von Witzland, freezing to death, sharing what happy memories they have and accepting the fact that they're gonna die, escaping from a hopeless battle that their army couldn't win. Oh, how the suffering and the misery continues.
@MehmetYlmaz-qz9bw7 жыл бұрын
One of the most powerfull movies
@reddavis48082 жыл бұрын
Wow, this was a brutal ending. I was at a loss of words just looking at the TV and the credits roll. What a horrible way to die.
@HooferStemos3 жыл бұрын
I also had a great uncle who fought in Russia with the Wehrmacht though not in Stalingrad but in the countless miles of its endless country. His horse stepped on a land mine while he was transporting a letter and my grandmother never got to see him again. It was shortly before he died that my entire family on my grandmothers side escaped the nazi regime and came to live in America where they could not speak the local language and had to learn English despite the pure hate coming from the Americans surrounding them despite the fact that they left their home country because they openly denounced the nazi regime and were almost killed for it
@matteoantonelli93024 жыл бұрын
In a war, there is always a good/right/better side than an other but there are good and evil people in the both side.
@CertifiedAmen4 жыл бұрын
This movie perfectly encapsulates the true reality of what really happened in Stalingrad, this movie didnt end on a cliche ending or dramatic moments but it ended in despair and showed real human moments, it showed us that even though the Germans were invaders, everyone suffered, and behind every gunsight and under every uniform, was a human, to say all Germans were Nazis or the Nazis deserved to freeze there is EXTREMELY one sided...no one deserves to go through hell, and thats what Stalingrad was, a freezing hell where millions people met their demise. The ending of this movie didnt make me feel that the Russians or Germans were bad but felt empathetic and disgust of what happened almost 90 years ago. That is history, this movie is history
@sergeontheloose4 жыл бұрын
nobody invited those germans to the Don steppes. They volunteered to freeze there.
@sergeontheloose3 жыл бұрын
@breaking the 4th wall like I've heard that "excuse" too many times to cover war crimes or something nasty to believe it. People always blame somebody - politicians, weather but not themselves and their abhorent behavior.
@Jotgut3 жыл бұрын
@breaking the 4th wall like "Nobody is shifting the blame here, but let me just quickly blame the Soviets" Lol, you fucking idiot
@stefandusan9629 Жыл бұрын
I imagine for the Russians the ending was pretty dramatic
@joehanson1187 Жыл бұрын
Dialogue betwee the freezing soldiers: "The good thing about the cold is... you dont feel anything anymore... everything is just frozen. It´s even too cold to weep... get lost ... you... come on get lost! The good thing.. about the cold..." "At least you won´t get a sunburn. You ever been to the desert? It sucks. It is so hot that... that you're just dripping everywhere. You think you are melting away like a piece of butter. I'm telling you the desert is shit! Except for the stars... they are so close. You know that, Hans?" End Card: During the Battle of Stalingrad more than a million people died, either killed, starved or frozen to death. Russians, Romanians, Italians, Hungarians, Germans, Austrians. From the 260.000 enclosed soldiers of the 6th army, 91.000 Soldiers were captured, of whom only 6000 returned home over the years. What an unneccesary and brutal war.
@alidemir569511 жыл бұрын
People are brothers. Politicians make us enemy. Not only German or Russian side suffered from the war. Lots of other nationalities suffered too. Respect for all them.
@bodi51612 жыл бұрын
I fucking cried at this ending...TWICE!...
@omega166ab7 жыл бұрын
Da kommen mir jedes mal die Tränen wenn ich den Film gucke...unsagbar traurig das traurigste Ende was ich je in einem Film gesehen habe und der Abspann tut sein übriges.
@15908150503able11 жыл бұрын
Corporal Fritz (at 3:06 ): You think you are melting like butter, the desert is shit! Except for the stars, they are so close, you know? So, after all this, I shed tears even tho I'm a guy but this film is just way too powerful!
@Skysiah05036 жыл бұрын
The contrast in this movie is sad, they all were friends in Italy enjoying there break from the war in Africa then Stalingrad pocked each of them off one by one until two friends remained Only to die with each other in a frozen field outside of Stalingrad...
@hardloper0708842 жыл бұрын
My mother said that my Grandfather (born 1908) was in Stalingrad and could leave with one of the last transport-planes, I couldn't check it, but I saw picture's of him from WW2. He died at the age of 61 in 1970
@СергейБ-ю9в2 жыл бұрын
У меня нет слов шоб выразить боль и сачуствие все солдатам павших по обе стороны жадности человека нет границ
@P4Tri0t4202 жыл бұрын
Wahre Worte Bruder 🇩🇪🇷🇺🤝🏻
@powereater13 жыл бұрын
No enemies to shoot, no enemies to shoot at you, there is a gun but it's pointless , there is no combat, no sacrifice, no honor, the only thing that awaits you is death how futile the war was.....
@Skysiah05036 жыл бұрын
RIP to both sides of this bloody conflict, it will soon become a faded memory like the way you feel about the Romans wars they fought 2000 years ago...
@MMadesen4 жыл бұрын
Since the invention of the camera, such wars will never be as forgotten as the ones, we have no photos or videos of.
@danieloehler24945 ай бұрын
Lois Trencker has produced movies about another war zone with arctic conditions: the battle betweeen Austria and Italy in the Alps above 3000 meters. Sometimes more men had been lost to avalanches than to bullets. In the movie "Berge in Flammen" (mountains in flames) two friends are fighting as officers on different sides. The final scene is much better than in the "Stalingrad" movie: Both friends climb again together.
@tpzlol8 жыл бұрын
It really is a shame, all the the brave men who died in ww2 because if ideologies. When I see the men in germany today it seems like only a hand full of guys would have the format to fight like this.
@tpzlol8 жыл бұрын
machida58 EDGY D G Y
@machida588 жыл бұрын
Cobb I don't like it. I don't like it at all. Nature sucks. And the only thing worse than nature is humanity.
@pahwraith8 жыл бұрын
A lot of men in WWII never actually fired their guns at the enemy and surrendered quickly. While modern soldiers in modern armies, all shoot the enemy in much higher numbers in battle. Dont underestimate today's men.
@machida588 жыл бұрын
pahwraith They should have pulled their guts out like the Samurai and then they would have died with honor.
@tpzlol8 жыл бұрын
yes, many surrendered, but have you looked at the death tolls of the major battles? Modern battles don't compare.
@zupergozer12 жыл бұрын
Many of them were just poor sods like you and me who got drafted. And they went through............this. No man deserves to go through such suffering
@GusArchievs2 жыл бұрын
so sad. Even though the Germans as a whole did unspeakable things to the Soviet people. I still feel on a person level for the ones that were forced to fight and didn't commit any atrocities of their own will and never made it home like any other soldier. in this case I'd be at least grateful to be able to die in embracing my best friend rather than alone. war is evil.
@donjorge83294 жыл бұрын
91.000 POWs...only 6000 returned. And then the Allies claimed to be "the good ones".
@tiagomonteiro1303 жыл бұрын
We defeated the wrong enemy : General Patton they killed him for speeking the truth
@TheBeccaMoura3 жыл бұрын
The nazis attacked everyone else to take their lands, murder millions and slave the others,THAT WAS THEIR PLAN!!! What were the allies supposed to do? Ask with kindness? What are u? A neonazi? Jesus.
@donjorge83293 жыл бұрын
@@TheBeccaMoura "The nazis"...of course. Good against evil, or what? Your world is very small, naive and onedimensional. If you use the name of the lord you should first learn about your fellow human beings.
@190261100 Жыл бұрын
dat is heel juist.en Europa zal de gevolgen dragen en niet alleen door Russische dreiging.
@mathieuamg385710 жыл бұрын
Nie wieder Krieg !
@89BlackGatomon10 жыл бұрын
Nie wieder... Das wünschen wir uns... Aber so vernümpftig ist die Menschheit noch lange nicht...
@FlammeundFeuer9 жыл бұрын
+Mathieu AMG Hehrer Wunsch. Ein Traum. Und dabei bleibt es auch.
@Edmund0070134 жыл бұрын
One of the Germans had a chance to fly out on one of the last JU-52's out of Stalingrad but chose to stay with his comrades. Talk about loyalty. About 35,000 mainly wounded German soldiers flew out of the pocket.
@mjb49836 жыл бұрын
The proud, mighty German army lay to waste by the bitter cold..I cried so much during this film
@Lobos2223 жыл бұрын
The German military in ww2 had more horses than Poland. This notion it was as high tech as you see in video games is not reality.
@matztz_4560 Жыл бұрын
@@Lobos222high Tech for that time
@Lobos222 Жыл бұрын
@@matztz_4560 Go watch some Lazorpig videos. Nothing the Nazis used in ww2, in this regards, came from Nazi Germany. Nazi Germany relied on what the more open society had fostered of scientists and such BEFORE they took power. Another aspect is that the stuff the Nazis had did not work as well as Neo Nazis and Wermachboos make it seem.
@NorthDelhiFighter4 жыл бұрын
When I saw the ending all I had in my mind was that the soldiers went through all of that just to die like this.
@apuuvah8 жыл бұрын
one of the best war monies ever
@jp__8783 жыл бұрын
Finally got the watch the movie when I saw it free on KZbin. A true horror movie by all means
@jackwhitehead63328 жыл бұрын
the scene before this was amazing, and when the girl died when I watched the movie I almost cried
@humanbeeing548 жыл бұрын
Was für ein film, eigentlich ist er ein zeitloses beispiel, für immer gültig...ein wirklich gelungenens Werk von Vilsmaier, einer der großen Regiseure unserer Nation.
@georgiamule6 жыл бұрын
A heart wrenching movie that perfectly depicts the suffering and death of young German men, who were so vibrant and confident, ground up in the horrors of Stalingrad.
@turbografx163 жыл бұрын
Annual watching during the Christmas season at my house!
@nguntial8882 жыл бұрын
this is enough to make a true man cry
@gastongallegos76288 жыл бұрын
the song is so epic
@edwardcarson814 жыл бұрын
Been several years, but I remember watching this movie, think I still have it on vhs stored away. As an american, I hate the sanitized blubber that the war profiteers in hollywood put out. Though generally realistic, saving private ryan isn't as strong, good but lacking. The closest america has to the stalingrad ordeal would be valley forge in the american revolution, a quote from the civil war general William T. Sherman, "war is hell" and I need to look it up cause I've forgotten it, but something along the lines of"any attempt to civilize it is folly." War, after surrender to tyranny, the worst thing authored by humanity.
@gnollrunner5206 жыл бұрын
Wow! The comment section, LOL! ..... A pissing war about which side was the most brutal in a totally brutal war.......Get a clue, everyone's brutal, and the more desperate people are the more brutal they get.
@Vdk7585 жыл бұрын
Extremely depressing and sad, too bad most war movies have a protagonist with plot armor and always has happy endings, germans need to make more war movies like this, maybe even a film set on the western front
@merledoughty5787 Жыл бұрын
as a young teen back in about 1961 I saw many of the films that were actula footage taken in this battle it has remained in my mind for years the scenes where people were hanged and the dead in the snow