August 1944. The Allies are approaching Paris and resistance groups within the city start to plan an uprising against the Germans. However, Hitler wants the city destroyed if it looks like t... Read allAugust 1944. The Allies are approaching Paris and resistance groups within the city start to plan an uprising against the Germans. However, Hitler wants the city destroyed if it looks like the Allies will take it.August 1944. The Allies are approaching Paris and resistance groups within the city start to plan an uprising against the Germans. However, Hitler wants the city destroyed if it looks like the Allies will take it.
- Nominated for 2 Oscars
- 4 nominations total
- GI in Tank
- (as Georges Chakiris)
- General Dietrich von Choltitz
- (as Gert Froebe)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaOne of the main reasons for the movie being filmed in black and white: the French authorities refused to allow red and black Nazi flags to fly in Paris, even for a movie. They agreed only to the use of black and gray Nazi flags.
- GoofsJudging by Choltitz's own memoirs ('Soldat enter Soldaten", 1951) there never was an order to deliberately destroy Paris or its monuments. The orders concerned laming industrial plants, blowing bridges, crushing uprisings, and defending the town as a fortress, accepting collateral damage. Choltitz later found out these orders were addressed to his superiors, not to him. He does mention Hitler asking "Is Paris burning?" but says he was informed of this by others, whose names he does not give.
- Quotes
Lieutenant Henri Karcher: [over the phone to his father] Hello, Papa? This is Lieutenant Karcher. Your son. In spite of your pessimstic view of my military career, I'd like to announce I've just made some prisoners of the general in command of Paris at the Hotel Meurice. He surrendered to me. But I'm still very bad at drill.
- Crazy creditsThe end credit sequence is in color.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Magician: The Astonishing Life and Work of Orson Welles (2014)
These events should, in theory anyway, provide sufficient material for a first-class movie, especially with René Clément at the helm.
In reality alas the film is a dud. One can try and find reasons. Personally I think it is down to a variety of factors: at a little under three hours it rambles; the newsreel footage is far more interesting and thrilling than the filmed action; there is an irritating mish mash of accents with some decidedly dodgy dubbing; there are too many writers and far too many famous faces. One critic at the time observed that the flames were extinguished by the shower of stars! The performance that stands out is that of Orson Welles as Swedish Consul Raoul Nordling, an unsung hero whose diplomatic relationship with von Choltitz assuredly influenced the latter's thinking. This relationship is very well depicted in Volker Schloendorff's film 'Diplomacy' with Niels Arestrup and Andre Dussollier as General and Consul.
The scene that really packs a punch is the sight and sound of the bell of Notre Dame which had been silenced for over four years. This is especially poignant in light of the recent fire that engulfed this monumental edifice. Clement has also included a rendition of 'La Marseillaise' which never fails to move. Needless to say the film was a tremendous success in France and Maurice Jarre's rather hurdy-gurdy 'Paris Waltz' theme extremely popular in its own right. Big budget plus well known actors equals great film? In this case decidedly not. Strange indeed that 'The Longest Day' which had no less than five directors, seems to work better than this with just the one. The real star of course is Paris itself.
- brogmiller
- Apr 21, 2020
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Details
- Runtime2 hours 53 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1