Enemy at the Gates with Joseph Fiennes: DVD Cover
  • Cover Image
  • Cover Image

Enemy at the Gates Director: Jean-Jacques Annaud Cast: Joseph Fiennes, Jude Law, Rachel Weisz, Bob Hoskins

DVD - Wide Screen Learn more

BUY THIS ITEM

  • $9.99 Online price
    $8.99 Member price
  • skip to cart
  • Add To List uiAction=GetAllLists&page=List&pageType=list&ean=097363386247&productCode=DV&maxCount=100&threshold=3

GET FREE SHIPPING ON ORDERS OF $25 OR MORE

DELIVERY & GIFT DETAILS:

Usually ships within 24 hours

Delivery Time and Shipping Rates

Eligible for gift wrap & gift message.

Enter a zip code

  • DVD Release Date: 08/14/2001
  • Rating: Rated R
  • Sales Rank: 2,047
 
  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Scenes
  • Customer Reviews
  • Cast & Crew
  • Full Product Details

Scenes

Features

Additional scenes; behind-the-scenes featurette; exclusive cast and crew interviews; theatrical trailer

Full Product Details

Scene Index

Side #1 -- WIDESCREEN
0. Scene Selections
1. The Wolf Hunter [2:46]
2. Crossing The Volga [7:00]
3. Suicide Charge [:16]
4. Five Bullets [5:07]
5. Stalin's Envoy [4:49]
6. Major Konig [2:08]
7. The Department Store [7:50]
8. Kruschev's Menace [4:12]
9. Steel Teeth [2:54]
10. Koulikov's Death [3:07]
11. Tania's Parents [6:02]
12. The Tractor Factory [3:43]
13. Mirror Effect [:42]
14. Intimacy [5:20]
15. Sacha's Risk [4:12]
16. Among The Dead [2:22]
17. The Young Cobbler's Fate [5:42]
18. Danilov's Remorse [:03]
19. Duel [1:32]
20. Victory [6:35]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

A sober, thoughtful, non-jingoistic World War II movie, Enemy at the Gates views the last century's bloodiest conflict from a different perspective and tells a remarkably absorbing story based on actual people and events. It takes place in 1942 during the siege of Stalingrad, which finds poorly supplied Russian soldiers mounting a valiant defense against relentless and overwhelming Nazi forces. Jude Law stars as a young Russian sniper whose unerring marksmanship claims the lives of innumerable German officers and thus makes him an invaluable asset to the propaganda machine run by Joseph Fiennes. Ed Harris plays a celebrated Nazi officer, also a distinguished marksman, sent to Stalingrad and charged with eliminating the now-legendary Soviet sniper before he can further demoralize the invaders. Writer-director Jean-Jacques Annaud (The Name of the Rose) dramatizes the Russian resistance with a documentarian's zeal, painstakingly noting the privations endured by Stalingrad's defenders. The suspenseful cat-and-mouse game between Law and Harris is skillfully developed, as is a romantic subplot in which Law and Fiennes compete for the affections of gorgeous Rachel Weisz. Enemy at the Gates never flinches when presenting war's horrors, but it acknowledges the essential humanity of the combatants on both sides -- an achievement that makes Annaud's film one of the very best of its type. The DVD edition includes a behind-the-scenes featurette, cast and crew interviews, additional scenes, and theatrical trailers. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble

More reviews and recommendations

Customer Reviews

Enemy at the Gatesby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

October 27, 2007: In the worst theater war imaginable between the Soviets and the Nazis, there also happens to be lust, jealousy, love and several other modicums of the human experience. Who knew that could happen in a Communist paradise? I loved the subplot fight of wits between Jude Law and Ed Harris. Ed Harris was deceivingly complex, as I have come to expect.

Enemy at the Gatesby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

October 23, 2005: This movie had me hooked by the first five minutes of it. The action in this movie is very exciting and Jude Law is just awesome. The only reason I gave this movie 4 stars is because it's not the best war movie out there just simply because there was some boring parts in it.


More Customer Reviews