Enemy at the Gates

54% of critics liked it

81% of users liked it

In theaters Mar 16, 2001
R, 2 hr. 11 min.

Movie Info

Director: Jean-Jacques Annaud
Rated: R
Running Time: 2 hr. 11 min.
Genre: Drama, Action & Adventure
Theater Release: Mar 16, 2001
DVD Release: Aug 14, 2001
Synopsis: A turning point in 20th century war history is the focus of this fact-based account of the 1942-1943 battle of Stalingrad, in which the Germans were finally defeated by Russian influence -- one of the bloodiest battles in World War II history. The film stars Jude Law as Vassili, a marksman from the Urals who is transported to Stalingrad in 1942, and a master German sniper, Major Koenig (Ed Harris). Koenig, an expert German sniper, is determined to eliminate his formidable opponent by any means

Critic Reviews

  • There's never much risk of reality intruding--just a lot of histrionic James Horner music nd plenty of designer stubble on the soldiers' faces. More...
  • Set-pieces get you so far (and Annaud delights in blowing this set to pieces), but the script's shortcomings aren't camouflaged by the decision to adopt Home Counties' accents as the film's lingua franca. More...
  • It's as if an obsessed movie nut had decided to collect every bad war-movie convention on one computer and program it to spit out a script. More...
  • Hackneyed material. More...
  • Any flaws in execution pale against those moments when the film brings history to vital life. More...
  • The story hits and misses for more than two hours following its opening artillery bloodbath. More...
  • It's this human understanding of an inhuman conflict that gives Enemy At The Gates so much power, despite its defects. More...
  • The film, directed by Jean-Jacques Annaud, doesn't stint on mud, corpses, or rubble, but the focus is all screwed-up. More...
  • The film is way too big for the story. More...
  • After Enemy at the Gates teases us with the promise of something big, it's hard to be happy with a small-scale story. More...