Sin novedad en el frente

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Alemania / Estados Unidos, 2022, 148 min

Director:

Edward Berger

Argumento literario:

Erich Maria Remarque (libro)

Cámara:

James Friend

Reparto:

Felix Kammerer, Albrecht Schuch, Moritz Klaus, Aaron Hilmer, Adrian Grünewald, Edin Hasanović, Daniel Brühl, Devid Striesow, Sebastian Hülk, Andreas Döhler (más)
(más profesiones)

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Sinopsis(1)

Sin novedad en el frente narra la apasionante historia de un joven soldado alemán en el frente occidental durante la Primera Guerra Mundial. Paul y sus compañeros experimentan en sus carnes cómo la euforia inicial de la guerra se convierte en desesperación y miedo mientras luchan por sus vidas - y las de los otros - en las trincheras. (Tripictures)

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Reseñas (11)

claudel 

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español Cuando se menciona a Erich Maria Remarque, recuerdo mi pequeña encuesta cuando todavía estaba en la secundaria. Pregunté a todos mis conocidos qué novela les viene primero a la mente cuando digo el nombre de este escritor alemán. Esperaba que ganara “Sin novedad en el frente“, sin lugar a dudas. Me equivoqué porque sobreestimé mi amplio círculo literario: ninguno ganó... Personalmente, prefiero otras obras de Remarque, aunque mi favorito personal ya ha sido adoptado a la pantalla, pero totalmente echado a perder. En el caso de la última adaptación de “Im Westen nichts Neues”, sólo podemos elogiar y felicitar a los alemanes por la exitosa adaptación de una de las novelas pacifistas más importantes de la historia. Leí el libro hace muchos años, pero siempre sentí que los cineastas se inspiraron por ella bastante libremente. Al menos estoy convencido de eso al final de la película, porque entonces no habría “El camino de la vuelta”. También estoy seguro de que el libro no fue tan explícito como la película, pero eso no importa en absoluto, al menos subraya la inutilidad de toda la guerra. Felix Kammerer brilló como actor y mi favorito Daniel Bruhl brilló en su papel secundario. La música merece un Oscar. Los cineastas podrían ponerse a adoptar a “Tres camaradas”... ()

POMO 

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español Como no he leído la novela, comento solamente la película bélica. Técnicamente buena. No hay nada que objetar a los decorados, el vestuario, la cámara y las escenas bélicas o de negociación. Sin embargo, la descripción de los personajes secundarios y, sobre todo, los diálogos se quedan cortos, parecen planos y no atraen emocionalmente. A la película le falta un mayor enfoque de guión en las historias personales de los protagonistas y de varios personajes más. ()

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Marigold 

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inglés The repetitive alternation of the heat of battle and the coldness of waiting, the recurring motifs for unimaginative half-wits, the book’s premise stripped of all its compelling scenes, which the film replaces with simple (and sometimes unrealistic) war porn and a completely hollow political storyline. The film fails to approximate Remarque’s insistent humanism except by literally illustrating the conflict of minor and major history, which doesn’t make a lot of sense (the horrors of the First World War didn’t actually consist in the fact that Foch wanted an armistice in six days and the Germans needed to think it over). As an adaptation, this is a disaster, devoid of psychology and with no thoroughly developed characters, and as a film it’s drawn out, transparent and superficial. The versions from 1930 and 1979 had something to them, but this fails even as a stand-alone work. Netflix’s problem isn’t the lack of casting actors of color. Its problem is that its projects lack dramaturgy and thus don’t much sense. ()

DaViD´82 

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inglés An adaptation that isn't afraid to mess with the very foundations of what is rightly a timeless classic and yet it is the most faithful adaptation possible. An established benchmark of how to adapt the written word into film language (not telling and showing), preserving the message and yet "standing up and not being a mere illustration". Everything is subordinated to the suggestive concept of "you are there with them". The absurdity and futility of the war machine through everyday trench existential horror, which, however, in addition to the horrific scenes (through a war scene, through the simple survival without hope for the future), manages to contrast the humanity and unexpected permeations of normality in spite of everything (officers, timelessness, humanity), often without words; purely by sight, sound, suggestion, music. Yes, you could say that it doesn't build up, it just kind of flows during the last days on the front. That’s not very viewer friendly, but it’s the intention, and it works, without being the same over and over again. It cannot be denied that many of the horrors have already been handled equally impressively by other works (but it is hard to accuse the adaptation of the classic on which everyone is based of being "a bit dated"). This is a film that will inevitably divide, some will berate it because "they messed with my beloved book", others because "we've seen this before and we don't need to do it again", others will bemoan "the non-existent pace". And then there'll be those who won't sleep easy as a result, not because of the explicit depictions of wartime atrocities or the topicality "it was a century ago", but for the overall sense of the confusion of it all, even though it makes do with little; perhaps the mere pilgrimage of a uniform from the front. ()

EvilPhoEniX 

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inglés Clear winner of this year's war films, and for me better than 1917 and Dunkirk (Hacksaw Ridge is a little higher in my heart though). I haven't read the book, nor have I seen the original, I just know that it's an adaptation of a literary classic by Remarque and I think the film stood up to it on all counts. From the very beginning the film thrusts us into the action of the war itself, which I very much appreciate – thankfully there is no hour-long introduction to the characters before the war, everything happens on the fly and thanks to that the film also has a decent pace and never gets boring. Edward Berger has his craft down pat, technically it's a decent work, with epic music that adds to the atmosphere and tension. The characters didn't really grow on me, except for the main one, so emotionally it didn't hit me that much, although it is sad in places. I found it interesting to watch a war film from the perspective of the Germans, usually it's the other way around, so the film is definitely unusual in that way too. I enjoyed the scenes with the General screaming for himself (the final speech was great) and the armistice negotiations on the train were also interesting. There's not a lot of action scenes, though, there are only three epic battles, but since the film is set in a battlefield most of the time, I didn't mind. The highlight is the sequence in the middle where the tanks and flamethrowers come on the scene – you can feel the true despair and horror of war, really uncomfortable. As for the gore, there's not much of it either, but there are a couple of brutal shots (the tank running over probably sticks in the mind the most), so for me really big satisfaction and I would say it’s the best WW1 war film. Definitely an Oscar snatcher here and kudos to Netflix. 8.5/10. ()

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