Enemy at the Gates

A single bullet can change history.

7.4
20012h 11m

A Russian and a German sniper play a game of cat-and-mouse during the Battle of Stalingrad in WWII.

Production

Logo for Paramount Pictures
Logo for Mandalay Pictures
Logo for Lions Gate Films

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Enemy At The Gates - Trailer

Enemy At The Gates - Trailer

Cast

Photo of Jude Law

Jude Law

Vassili Zaitsev

Photo of Joseph Fiennes

Joseph Fiennes

Commisar Danilov

Photo of Rachel Weisz

Rachel Weisz

Tania Chernova

Photo of Ed Harris

Ed Harris

Major König

Photo of Bob Hoskins

Bob Hoskins

Nikita Khrushchev

Photo of Ron Perlman

Ron Perlman

Koulikov

Photo of Eva Mattes

Eva Mattes

Mother Filipov

Photo of Gabriel Thomson

Gabriel Thomson

Sacha Filipov

Photo of Matthias Habich

Matthias Habich

General Paulus

Photo of Lenn Kudrjawizki

Lenn Kudrjawizki

Comrade in Train

Photo of Gennadi Vengerov

Gennadi Vengerov

Russian NCO

Photo of Dan van Husen

Dan van Husen

Political Officer

Photo of Sophie Rois

Sophie Rois

Ludmilla

Photo of Hans Martin Stier

Hans Martin Stier

Red Army General

Photo of Clemens Schick

Clemens Schick

German NCO

Photo of Hendrik Arnst

Hendrik Arnst

Fat Colonel

Photo of Claudius Freyer

Claudius Freyer

Aide de Camp

Photo of Bernd Lambrecht

Bernd Lambrecht

Captain with Lighter

Photo of Maxim Kovalevski

Maxim Kovalevski

Politruk / Sniper

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Reviews

W

Wuchak

7/10

***War of the rats in crumbling Stalingrad during WWII***

RELEASED IN 2001 and directed by Jean-Jacques Annaud, "Enemy at the Gates" takes place in the last four months of 1942 during the pivotal Battle of Stalingrad. Russian troops are carted in by the literal trainloads as the Germans attack/bomb the city. Once the dust clears the situation settles into a more personal battle of sharpshooting wills. A lowly young Russian soldier named Vassili (Jude Law) distinguishes himself for his shooting skills and is promoted as a national hero to motivate the Russian cause. After numerous German officers are assassinated, Major König (Ed Harris), the top German sniper, is assigned to seek out and eliminate Vassili.

Most WWII films take place on the Western Front whereas "Enemy" is one of only two mainline films I can think of that address the Eastern front, the other being Sam Peckinpah's underrated "Cross of Iron" (1977).

Three things stuck in my mind after seeing “Enemy at the Gates” years ago: (1.) The opening sequence where the Russian troops are boated across the Volga to join the fight is extremely harrowing, not far removed from the opening D-Day invasion in “Saving Private Ryan” (1998), but different. “Enemy” is worth viewing for this sequence alone. (2.) The city-in-rubble sets with bodies strewn everywhere had a lasting impression on me as did the scurrying-like-rats-through-the-rubble warfare. (3.) Some may find this weird, but I always remembered the discreet lovemaking scene while the soldiers lain in the rubble trying to sleep. I'm not sure why this left an impression, maybe because it struck me as so real: Men & women would be drawn to one another and mate even in the worst possible scenarios.

The film was based on the book "War of the Rats" by David L. Robbins and thus intentionally provokes the imagery of human rats scurrying through the debris. The cast also includes Joseph Fiennes as the political officer who elevates Vassili to hero status via his pamphlets and articles, while Rachel Weisz plays the romantic interest between the two. Ron Perlman is also on hand in a limited role as Vassili's sharpshooting comrade.

As with any film based on historical events there are facts-obsessed critics who decry the lack of authenticity in this or that detail (e.g. "The zippers on the trousers aren't right, blasphemy!!"), but "Enemy" gets the gist correct and, besides, it motivates the viewer to research the actual Battle of Stalingrad. What more can you ask for?

The fact is Vassili had 260 verified Nazi kills and played a key role in motivating the Russians to victory in the Battle of Stalingrad, the largest and bloodiest battle in the history of warfare (with roughly 2 million killed, wounded or captured). The movie effectively shows how the Russian combatants weren't necessarily professionally trained soldiers; many of them were peasants, workers, teachers, mailmen, farmers, etc. They knew they could die the next morning hence they celebrated (and made love) while they could. Stalingrad was one of the major turning points of World War II; from then on it was all downhill for Germany.

FINAL WORD: "Enemy at the Gates" details an oft-ignored important aspect of WWII, the Eastern front. It has several memorable scenes, especially the opening crossing of the Volga and also a clever sequence involving a large shard of reflective glass.

THE FILM RUNS 2 hours, 11 minutes and was shot entirely in Germany (Brandenburg and Bavaria).

GRADE: B+

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