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Saturday, Jul 15, 2000
All Quiet on the Western Front
Erich Maria Remarque wrote in the preface to his novel, "It will try simply to tell of a generation who, even though they may have escaped its shells, were destroyed by the war." Lacking any conciliation to patriotism or glory, any exploitation of spectacle, Milestone's film remains one of the boldest statements ever made against the cruelty and futility of war. In Germany, 1917, seven enthusiastic schoolboys leave their village to enlist in the army. Brutalized and disillusioned in training, they are posted to the French front, where further horrors await them. Then, further disillusionments: the soldier home on leave is now a stranger. Begun as a silent, the film's extraordinary tracking shots have often been taken for "actuality" footage; some overtly pacifist material was cut soon after release.Preserved from original picture and sound negatives in LC, nitrate pre-print in BFI, and other sources. Some footage may be forever missing, but the LC restoration brings this important film back to audiences in a version closer to the original than at any time since 1931.
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