Enemy At The Gate

Enemy At The Gate. Stalingrado y su última batalla. Panorama Time and time again, Enemy at the Gates squanders its pulse-pounding momentum on long, high-falutin' stretches of pointy-headed pretentiousness that just get in the road of the good stuff. The Germans and Russians are fighting over every block, leaving only ruins behind

Picture of Enemy at the Gates
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Two Russian and German snipers play a game of cat-and-mouse during the Battle of Stalingrad. The political officer Danilov leads him on, publishing his efforts to give his countrymen some hope.

Picture of Enemy at the Gates

Enemy at the Gates (Stalingrad in France and L'Ennemi aux portes in Canada) is a 2001 war film directed, co-written, and produced by Jean-Jacques Annaud, based on William Craig 's 1973 nonfiction book Enemy at the Gates: The Battle for Stalingrad, which describes the events surrounding the Battle of Stalingrad in the winter of 1942-1943 An all-star cast lights up the screen in this riveting epic hailed as "a vivid dramatization of one of history's titanic turning points" The Russian sniper Vassili Zaitsev stalks the Germans, taking them out one by one, thus hurting the morale of the German troops

Enemy at the Gates (2001) Posters — The Movie Database (TMDB). A Russian and a German sniper play a game of cat-and-mouse during the Battle of Stalingrad. Time and time again, Enemy at the Gates squanders its pulse-pounding momentum on long, high-falutin' stretches of pointy-headed pretentiousness that just get in the road of the good stuff.

Enemy at the Gates (2001) Posters — The Movie Database (TMDB). (Gene Shalit, TODAY) The year is 1942 and the Nazis are cutting a deadly swath through Russia The political officer Danilov leads him on, publishing his efforts to give his countrymen some hope.