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Enemy at the Gates Proving again that war is hell, and some war films are, too, Jean-Jacques Annaud's "Enemy at the Gates" takes a great setting, some resonant themes, a turning point in 20th ...
In some ways, "Enemy at the Gates" seems like a tale of the Soviet Union told by Ayn Rand: It was the idea of an indomitable hero, rather than the potentially troublesome facts, ...
There’s French, British, German, and Irish production money invested in the European battlefield pic Enemy at the Gates, and why not: On a bookstore shelf, the spine of this muddy epic would ...
In the drama's opening scenes, the atmosphere of fear and confusion thickens by the minute, as the 300-odd British army contingent deployed on the island departs to fight elsewhere, rather than be ...
While "Enemy at the Gates" didn't so much pit Korra and Kuvira against each other, it did set the stage for the events to come. (As Meelo mentioned at the top of the episode, ...
Enemy At The Gates, about the siege of Stalingrad, is the most expensive European film ever made. It is a decent enough action film, but not a great one ...
Enemy At The Gates stars three of Britain's best-looking actors and begins splendidly, with the arrival of a young Russian sniper (Jude Law) at the siege of Stalingrad.
In 1973 William Craig wrote a book he entitled Enemy at the Gates: the Battle of Stalingrad. Much of the book is based on personal interviews with Vassili Zaitsev, the young boy from the Ural ...