All Quiet on the Western Front - posters, covers, wallpapers

Lots of posters, covers and wallpapers for the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front"
All Quiet on the Western Front (1930)
Timing: 2:13 (133 min)
All Quiet on the Western Front - TMDB rating
7.747/10
915
All Quiet on the Western Front - Kinopoisk rating
0/10
35
All Quiet on the Western Front - IMDB rating
0/10
0

Posters, covers

Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #986292K 1500p
Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #986303K 2032p
Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #986315K UHD 3000p
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Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #986332K 1443p
Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #98634Full HD 1200p
Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #986355K UHD 3000p
Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #986362K 1500p
Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #986375K UHD 3000p
Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #986383K 1937p
Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #986393K 1937p
Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #986402K 1443p
Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #986412K 1443p
Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #986425K UHD 3000p
Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #98643HD Ready 750p
Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #986443K 1920p
Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #986455K UHD 2974p
Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #7549082K 1500p
Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #7549092K 1500p
Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #7549115K UHD 3000p
Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #7549125K UHD 2767p
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Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #7549143K 1920p
Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #7549153K 1920p
Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #7549163K 1920p
Poster to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #754917Full HD 1219p

Backdrops, wallpaper

Backdrop to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #754900Full HD 1080p
Backdrop to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #754901HD Ready 720p
Backdrop to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #1886074K UHD 2160p
Backdrop to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #188608HD Ready 720p
Backdrop to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #188609Full HD 1080p
Backdrop to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #188610Full HD 1080p
Backdrop to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #188611HD Ready 720p
Backdrop to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #489374HD Ready 900p
Backdrop to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #754902HD Ready 831p
Backdrop to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #754903HD Ready 1078p
Backdrop to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #754904Full HD 1080p
Backdrop to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #754905Full HD 1080p
Backdrop to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #754906HD Ready 830p
Backdrop to the movie "All Quiet on the Western Front" #7549074K UHD 2160p

What's left behind the scenes

  • The film is based on the novel of the same name by Erich Maria Remarque.
  • After playing the role of Paul Bäumer and gaining a certain moral experience during the film’s production, actor Lew Ayres refused military service during World War II for moral and ethical reasons.
  • For large-scale battle scenes and pyrotechnic effects, over 20 acres of a large ranch in California were transformed into battlefields with more than 2,000 'soldiers'.
  • The film was banned from screening in Nazi Germany.
  • The Berlin premiere of the film was disrupted by Goebbels himself, who pelted the audience with "stink bombs" and live mice.
  • In 1990, the film was included in the U.S. National Film Registry.
  • It was the first sound film to use a giant mobile crane with a camera, particularly for filming realistic battle scenes, and one of the first sound films to widely employ moving cameras.
  • Initially released in a 140-minute version, the film was later reduced to 110 and even 90 minutes. In 1939, a version with a special anti-Nazi insert was released.
  • The film's producer, Carl Laemmle Jr., was very unhappy with the film's tragic ending and demanded that Lewis Milestone rewrite it with a happy ending. Milestone sarcastically replied that in that case, the French would not win the war in the film, but the Germans, after which the conflict was resolved.
  • The film depicts death and limb loss in great detail, making it quite graphic for its time. This is because the so-called Hays Code became an unofficial, yet effective, standard of moral censorship in American cinema only in 1934 (adopted in 1930 and named after the Republican politician who headed the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors Association, now the Motion Picture Association of America, from 1922-1945). Furthermore, Universal Pictures considered the film's subject matter important enough to allow scenes of violence to be shown on screen. The scene with a soldier grabbing onto barbed wire, but then an artillery shell explodes, leaving only the hands still clutching the wire, was suggested to director and screenwriter Lewis Milestone by a former German soldier. He was working as a general laborer on the set and had witnessed a similar event firsthand during a French attack on German trenches. Milestone decided to include this scene in the film.
  • The Minister of Internal Affairs of Nazi Germany, Wilhelm Frick (1877-1946), banned the film on the grounds that it allegedly portrayed all Germans as cowards. Ironically, in neighboring Poland, the same film was outlawed as being exclusively "pro-German".
  • Pro-Nazi provocateurs attempted to disrupt screenings of the film in Germany, often releasing pre-caught rats or stench bombs into cinemas, as the bitterness of defeat in World War I was still fresh. Eventually, the Nazis simply banned the film. It was not shown in Germany again until 1956, although immediately after its release, the film filled theaters in neighboring Switzerland, France, and the Netherlands. Special train and bus services were even organized for Germans wishing to see the film to the nearest cinema in those countries.
  • Initially, Sesa Pitts was cast in the role ultimately played by Beryl Mercer, but she was primarily associated with comedic roles and characters, so the audience began to giggle in anticipation of her appearance on screen during previews, and all scenes with her character were reshot with Mercer.
  • The Minister of the Interior of Nazi Germany, Wilhelm Frick (1877-1946), banned the film on the grounds that it allegedly portrayed all Germans as cowards. Ironically, in neighboring Poland, the same film was declared illegal as being exclusively 'pro-German'.
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