1930 German Movie "Westfront 1918"

Westfront_1918.jpg

I don’t know if this the right place to discuss this here, but I was simply wondering if some of you have ever seen the 1930 German movie “Westfront 1918 -Vier von der Infanterie”?
It looks to me the re-enacted fighting scenes look terrible real and that the uniform and equipment details are correct. Have anyone of you see this old movie and what is your opinion? To freshen up your memory some quotes from wiki about this movie:

Westfront 1918 is a German film, set mostly in the trenches of the Western Front during World War I. It was directed in 1930 by Georg Wilhelm Pabst, from the novel Vier von der Infanterie by Ernst Johannsen, and deals with the impact of the war on a group of infantrymen. It featured an ensemble cast led by screen veterans Fritz Kampers and Gustav Diessl; Diessl had been a prisoner of war for a year during the war. The film bears resemblance to its close contemporary, the All Quiet on the Western Front (1930), an American production, although is has a bleaker tone. It was particularly pioneering in its early use of sound - it was Pabst's first "talkie" - in that Pabst managed to record live audio during complex tracking shots through the trenches.

Westfront 1918 was a critical success when it was released, although it was often shown in truncated form. With the rise of Nazism, the film quickly became considered by the German authorities as unsuitable for the people, notably for its obvious pacificism, and for its clear denunciation of the total and unuseful abomination of war. This was an attitude that propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels would soon label as "cowardly defeatism".

Some shots from the film were used for scene-setting purposes in a 1937 BBC Television adaptation of the play Journey's End.
 
Pierre, Drake:

It is an excellent movie and available as a Region 2 DVD sans subtitles:

http://www.amazon.de/Westfront-1918-Fritz-Kampers/dp/B000GG4NOM/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=dvd&qid=1268179822&sr=8-1

I have an old VHS copy with English subtitles from the Janus Films collection.

Pabst was one of the all-time greats. The final film he directed was Aufstand gegen Adolf Hitler!, also known as The Jackboot Mutiny.

http://www.amazon.de/Aufstand-gegen-Adolf-Hitler-Bernhard/dp/B00009RBJU/ref=sr_1_7?ie=UTF8&s=dvd&qid=1268180013&sr=1-7

Chas
 
Thanks Brett and Chas.
I consider it as a remarkable movie also. Being it one of the first German sound movies it is amazing to hear the French people talk French and of course the Germans talk German. Only the better war movies of later periods let the actors speak their native language (i.e. WW2 movie “Tora Tora”, where all Japanese actors talk in Japanese!).

I may conclude, Chas, that in this movie the equipment of the soldiers etc. are correct? I ask this, because there are made so many more modern WW1 movies, which are quite sloppy considering timelines with other fronts and battles, uniforms, and equipment. I had the impression that the fighting scenes in this acting movie resemble the many documentary movies I have seen or at least the atmosphere.
Brett, I have a compressed copy, but, for you alas, also without subtitles. I have even searched www.opensubtitles.org for you , but I am afraid alas without success. PM me , if you have still interest in this movie, Brett.
 
I like the film as it shows the home front more realisticly then All's Quiet on The Western Front . The use of mid war Frech tanks is interesting in the film as well. The landscapes and Artillery was done well ,for a film that age it has some good production values . I thought this was made in 1927 or 28 ?
I have the DVD with English subtitles. .A must see for the Ww1 movie buff.
 
Thanks to the generosity of Pierre, I have a copy and am half way through the movie (husbandly duties comes first apparently). I am thoroughly enjoying it, despite struggling along without subtitles.

The fact that the trenches and battlefield have been faithfully recreated, no doubt with the input of many fellows who had served on the Western Front, adds to the significance of the film.

Cheers Pierre
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Glad you all did enjoy this vintage movie, gentlemen. Although the tempo of the film is much slower than we are used to nowadays, and although there is a lot of time spent on unnecessary romantic BS, the scenes in the trenches are rather realistic. I specially found interesting the scene about the “einsturzende Unterstand unter unser eigene Artillerie!”. Even an improvised bunker or even a better built one could not withstand the heavy artillery grenades at the risk for the sheltering soldiers to be buried alive under the collapsing top construction. The fight between the “Student” and the French colonial soldier in the water filled shell hole, and the advancing French tanks were also highlights for me. I was interested to find in the story that the Germans were using also the fighting tactic of advanced shell hole defense systems to fight off a French attack.
Thanks for sharing your experience with me.
 
Pierre Grande Guerre said:
I may conclude, Chas, that in this movie the equipment of the soldiers etc. are correct?
Hi Pierre:

To the best of my knowledge everything is correct. Made just twelve years after the Armistice, there would be surplus aplenty.

Another great movie from the French point of view is Les Croix de Bois (1932). Talk about being buried alive; this film takes the experience to an agonizing degree.
 
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