Enemy
at the Gates Movie Review:
It
is the Fall of 1942. The Third Reich has set it's sights
on the city of Stalingrad. Soviet troops must fight and
struggle for Mother Russia to keep German forces from taking
the city. Those who do not fight shall die. Within this
dramatic setting, a more personal story is about to unfold.
One man has shown himself to be a hero of strength, bravery,
and the Communist way. This is the true story of that man,
Vassily Zaitsev, played by Jude Law, expert Soviet sniper
and inspiration to all who would battle against the Nazi
war machine. It is also the story of Major Koenig, played
by Ed Harris, the German sharp-shooter sent to assassinate
Vassily and aid Hitler's minions in their bloody seige of
Stalingrad. Events soon work their way toward the enevitable
confrontation between these two men of combat.
Sounds
like a great war movie, doesn't it? Unfortunately, while
Enemy at the Gates does distill down to the above true-life
account, the story is nearly overpowered by it's own dramatic
embellishments.
It's
first and biggest problem is a very uneven script. There
are also some weirdly light comic moments stuck in between
the horrors of battle, which have no bearing on the plot,
and the filmmakers have made the very odd decision to include
a love triangle in the story. In addition, the script implies
that the Soviet people continued to fight only because they
had a hero, Vassily, to inspire them. I have a sneaking
suspicion that World War II wasn't quite so simplistic.
However, none of these problems are beyond the help of a
good film editor. This is a movie that really needed be
re-cut before release. I'm no expert, but I'd say about
twenty minutes could easily have been deleted without affecting
the central story, and that would also have tightened up
the slow moving second act quite nicely. Enemy at the Gates
is a pan-European production, which in this case could have
been improved by applying the Hollywood editing formula.
The
next problem is the special effects work. I'm amazed that
any film this side of Tokyo would use computer generated
effects as poor as the ones seen in Enemy at the Gates.
The film features fighter planes and bombers that fly around
exactly the way that bricks don't, computerized boats that
seem to hover above equally computerized waterlines, and
many other smaller effects that are just as unconvincing.
On
the upside, the acting in Enemy at the Gates is quite good,
as is the directing. Also, there are a handful of truly
suspenseful scenes which almost balance out the uneven ones.
As a whole, Enemy at the Gates does deliver a dramatic,
supposedly true story with believable characters and a fair
amount of action. If you can overlook the mediocre effects,
most of the love story, and a plethora of strangely non-German,
non-Russian accents, then it's worth the matinee price.
Allen
J. Vestal
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