Stalingrad | |
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Directed by | Fedor Bondarchuk |
Written by | Ilya Tilkin Sergey Snezhkin |
Produced by | Alexander Rodnyansky Dmitriy Rudovskiy Sergey Melkumov Natalia Gorina Steve Schklair (3D Producer) |
Starring | Petr Fedorov Yanina Studilina Dmitriy Lysenkov Alexey Barabash Andrey Smolyakov Maria Smolnikova Vladimir Kurlovich Thomas Kretschmann Heiner Lauterbach Daniel Moorehead Sergey Bondarchuk |
Cinematography | Maksim Osadchiy |
Edited by | Natalia Gorina |
Music by | Angelo Badalamenti |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Sony Pictures Releasing[2][3] |
Release dates |
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Running time | 131 minutes[4] |
Country | Russia |
Languages | Russian German |
Budget | $30 million[5] |
Box office | $68.1 million[6] |
Stalingrad (Russian: Сталинград) is a 2013 Russian war film directed by Fedor Bondarchuk. It was the first Russian movie released in IMAX.[7][8] The film was released in September 2013 in Volgograd (formerly Stalingrad) and October in Russia before its international release in subsequent months (all releases were handled by the foreign-language arm of Columbia Pictures). The film was selected as the Russian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 86th Academy Awards,[9][10] but it was not nominated. Stalingrad received the I3DS (International 3D and Advanced Imaging Society) Jury Award for Russia in 2014.
The film is a love story set in November 1942 during the Battle of Stalingrad, three months into the six month battle that caused nearly 2,000,000 total casualties (wounded, killed, captured) for the two opponents, including tens of thousands of Russian civilians. The story follows soldiers from both sides as they fight to survive while saving the lives of their loves, and struggle with retaining their humanity in the face of certain death and the unspeakable horrors of war. The plot seems to be somewhat influenced[clarification needed] by Chapter 57 of Life And Fate, by writer and journalist Vasily Grossman, and therefore does have a literary antecedent.