Enemy At the Gates
The Berlin Film Festival's opening-night curse has not been lifted. Two years
ago it was Aimée & Jaguar, a decent melodrama about lesbians
in World War II that made barely a dent in the US. How about an
English-language film by Wim Wenders? Nope, last year's intriguing The
Million Dollar Hotel has yet to appear here. And last month's Berlin
opener, Jean-Jacques Annaud's Enemy at the Gates, isn't going to reverse
the trend. It's the Battle of Stalingrad as staged by Masterpiece
Theatre.
For starters, this film is in English. That might sound like a plus, but
listening to Germans and Russians (whose languages could not be more different)
converse in the Queen's English makes you wonder what they're fighting over.
Right from the start, an Alistair Cooke-like voiceover describes Stalingrad as
"a city on the Volga where the fate of the world is being decided" -- as if
this were an ESPN pre-game show. The player clichés include a beautiful
Russian Jewess named Tania (Rachel Weisz) who fights alongside the men and a
double-agent kid named Sacha (Gabriel Marshall-Thomson) who's a dead ringer for
the boy in the Warsaw Ghetto photograph. The plot has the Davy Crockett-like
sharpshooter Vassili (Jude Law) taking on his German counterpart Major
König (Ed Harris) while all Stalingrad watches breathlessly, unmindful of
the half a million or so who are dying. Meanwhile Danilov (Joseph Fiennes) is
making Vassili a newspaper legend as Annaud pays ludicrous tribute to The
Front Page; and both men are falling for Tania. Other anomalies include the
appearance of Nikita Khrushchev (Bob Hoskins), whose name no one can pronounce
correctly, and John Williams's theme from Schindler's List, which
permeates the film even though the score is credited to James Horner. Hitler
should have given Stalingrad a pass -- and that's your cue for this overblown
movie. At the Holiday, Showcase, and Swansea cinemas.
-- Jeffrey Gantz
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