Film Snail

Das Boot
Das Boot

8.1

Das Boot

R·1981·150m

Summary

A German submarine hunts allied ships during the Second World War, but it soon becomes the hunted. The crew tries to survive below the surface, while stretching both the boat and themselves to their limits.

Crew

Director, Screenplay

Wolfgang Petersen

Novel

Lothar-Günther Buchheim

Screenplay

Dean Riesner

Reviews

Wuchak

Wuchak

September 17, 2020

7

_**Life on a German U-boat**_

During WW2, the German submarine U-96 (with Jürgen Prochnow as the captain) leaves the French harbor of La Rochelle for war adventures & misfortunes in the North Atlantic when they’re eventually commissioned to go through the Strait of Gibraltar. The men experience the challenging claustrophobic life of serving on a U-boat with its highs and lows. Who will make it back alive?

“Das Boot” (1981) is a well done accounting of what it was like to live on a U-boat in WW2 – the claustrophobic living conditions, boredom, filth, sheer terror and… no women. One great scene is when the submarine surfaces after torpedoing a couple ships in a British convoy; it’s like hell came to Earth.

The flick focuses on the Germans in the restricted spaces of the U-boat and it’s amazing that a compelling film can be made from that limited dramatic angle. While this is a war picture, it doesn’t glorify war. It’s “anti-war” simply by showing the way it was for sub-mariners.

The film runs 2 hours, 29 minutes, and was shot in North Sea near Heligoland; the Atlantic Ocean; La Rochelle, France; and Bavaria, Germany.

GRADE: B

Media

Status:

Released

Original Language:

German

Budget:

$14,000,000.00

Revenue:

$85,000,000.00

Keywords

based on novel or book
submarine
war correspondent
atlantic ocean
gibraltar
world war ii
duty
suicide mission
drinking
sailor
convoy
destroyer
naval warfare
naval battle
battle of the atlantic