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Das Boot (1981, W. Ger.) (aka
The Boat)
In Wolfgang Petersen's harrowing and nerve-wracking,
claustrophobic thriller, conveyed by a Steadicam moving camera through
the narrow passageways and by tightly-composed shots:
- the tense scene when the alarm on the World War
II German U-boat U-96, commanded by conscience-stricken, embittered,
stoic Captain Henrich Lehmann-Willenbrock (Jurgen Prochnow) was
sounded; orders were shouted ("Get into diving positions!"),
and the sub was forced to dive to a depth of almost 200 meters
- although it was only a practice dive
Sinking, Burning Oil Tanker - With Survivors
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- the memorable sequence when U-96 torpedoed a British
convoy oil tanker; shortly later after surfacing, the German sub
crew watched the enemy tanker still afloat, as helpless survivors
scrambled over the fiery wreckage, burned, screamed for help, and
drowned - and some of the sailors swam toward them, while the Captain
ordered: "We can't take prisoners. You know that"
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Worried Faces
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Pressure Gauge
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Ecstatic Jubilation When U-Boat Began to Rise
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- the realistic scene of a deep emergency free-fall
dive when the malfunctioning, aging sub was surrounded by British
ships and the crew raced through the narrow tube to their stations
as the sub dove deep - and there were the first indications that
the submerged aging structure was no longer functioning properly
- it was feared that it would start leaking due to the powerful
underwater pressure, signaled by excruciating groans and moans
and rivets popping and blasting like gunshots
- the crew was able to get the sub's engines running
in order to rise from a dangerous depth of 280 metres just before
their oxygen ran out - and the crew's jubilation that they would
live - they surfaced onto the top of the water and opened the hatch:
("They're going. I've never heard such sweet music in all my
life...They're running! They won't catch us this time. Not this time!...They
haven't spotted us. They're snoring in their bunks. They're drinking
in the bar. Celebrating our sinking! Not yet, my friends!")
- in the concluding scene back at the German-commanded
port at La Rochelle (on the Atlantic coast of France), the Allied
air raid that killed or wounded most of the U-boat's crew members;
Werner crouched over the dead Captain on the dock, who lived just
long enough to watch as his U-boat sink in the waters near him
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Captain
(Jurgen Prochnow)
Deep-Diving U-Boat
Concluding Allied Air Assault at La Rochelle (France) dock
The Death of the U-Boat's Captain After Seeing U-Boat's
Sinking, With Lt. Werner (Herbert Grönemeyer) Leaning Over
Him
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