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History Film / AllQuietOnTheWesternFront1930

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"This story is to be neither an accusation nor a confession, and least of all an adventure, for death is not an adventure to those who stand face to face with it. It will try simply to tell of a generation of men who, even though they may have escaped shells, were destroyed by the war."

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"This ->''"This story is to be neither an accusation nor a confession, and least of all an adventure, for death is not an adventure to those who stand face to face with it. It will try simply to tell of a generation of men who, even though they may have escaped shells, were destroyed by the war."
"''
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"This story is to be neither an accusation nor a confession, and least of all an adventure, for death is not an adventure to those who stand face to face with it. It will try simply to tell of a generation of men who, even though they may have escaped shells, were destroyed by the war."
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** Fairly early in the film, as Paul and his squad are marching into a combat zone for the first time, there's a shot of Paul and several other soldiers looking back at the truck that dropped them off. At the end, after every soldier in that shot has been killed, the shot of each soldier looking back is repeated with graves sign.

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** Fairly early in the film, as Paul and his squad are marching into a combat zone for the first time, there's a shot of Paul and several other soldiers looking back at the truck that dropped them off. At the end, after every soldier in that shot has been killed, the shot of each soldier looking back is repeated now with graves sign.
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** Fairly early in the film, as Paul and his squad are marching into a combat zone for the first time, there's a shot of Paul and several other soldiers looking back at the truck that dropped them off. At the end, after every soldier in that shot has been killed, the shot of each soldier looking back is repeated.

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** Fairly early in the film, as Paul and his squad are marching into a combat zone for the first time, there's a shot of Paul and several other soldiers looking back at the truck that dropped them off. At the end, after every soldier in that shot has been killed, the shot of each soldier looking back is repeated.repeated with graves sign.

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There is no such Oner shot in the film


** The famous ending where Paul is killed while reaching for a butterfly is a call back to earlier in the film when he came home on leave, and he and his sister talked about his butterfly collection.



* DownerEnding: Most of the characters are killed, including Kat being killed by shrapnel from a bomb, and Paul being shot and killed by a sniper on the front line.



* TheOner: A rather long shot of French soldiers getting mowed down.
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* StrangerInAFamiliarLand: Paul is so uncomfortable when he's home on leave that he goes back to the front three days early. Later he tells Kat that "it's not home there anymore."

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* ItWillNeverCatchOn: In the opening scene Mr. Meyer expresses confidence the war will end in a few months. That's soon followed by Kantorek the jackass teacher saying "I believe it will be a quick war. There will be few losses."

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* ItWillNeverCatchOn: In the opening scene Mr. Meyer expresses confidence the war will end in a few months. That's soon followed by Kantorek the jackass teacher saying "I believe it will be a quick war. There will be few losses."" The exact time frame isn't specified but later comments make it clear that Paul and his buddies joined up pretty early in what turned out to be a four-year war.
* LoweredRecruitingStandards: When Paul gets back from leave and makes it back to the 2nd Company he's greeted by a 16-year-old boy. Tjaden sarcastically comments that all they're getting now for replacement is untrained boys that go out and die.
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* CompositeCharacter: In the novel it's a minor character who is taken to the "dying room" at the hospital, only to surprise everyone by coming back in triumph. In this film it's Paul himself who makes that return.


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* TheFilmOfTheBook: Much more faithful to the novel than the 2022 German film, retaining many plot points (Kemmerich's boots, Paul and his friends swimming across a canal to get with some French girls, Paul going home on leave) that the later film omitted.
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* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: Himmelstoss is last seen charging along with other German soldiers. While the novel states he came out okay and became less of a JerkAss, the film seems to imply that [[KilledByTheAdaptation he died during that particular attack]].


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* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: WhatHappenedToTheMouse:
**
Himmelstoss is last seen charging along with other German soldiers. While the novel states he came out okay and became less of a JerkAss, the film seems to imply that [[KilledByTheAdaptation he died during that particular attack]].

attack]].
** Albert's fate is left ambiguous, as he is still in the hospital following his leg amputation when Paul is discharged and sent on leave.

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* PhantomLimbPain: The gang goes to see Kemmerich in the hospital. He complains of terrible pain in his right foot. The camera pans down to reveal that his right foot has been amputated.

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* PhantomLimbPain: PhantomLimbPain:
**
The gang goes to see Kemmerich in the hospital. He complains of terrible pain in his right foot. The camera pans down to reveal that his right foot has been amputated.
** Later, the same thing happens to Albert, and this time Albert, who was there when everybody visited Kemmerich, realizes what it means, that his leg has been
amputated.

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* TheCameo: Raymond Griffith had a very successful career as the star of a series of comedies in the 1920s. Unfortunately for him, he could not raise his voice above a whisper due to a childhood bout of diptheria, so his acting career ended with the debut of the talkies. This film has his final role, a memorable non-speaking part as a French soldier that Paul kills.

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* TheCameo: Raymond Griffith had a very successful career as the star of a series of comedies in the 1920s.1920s (see ''Film/HandsUp''). Unfortunately for him, he could not raise his voice above a whisper due to a childhood bout of diptheria, so his acting career ended with the debut of the talkies. This film has his final role, a memorable non-speaking part as a Duval, the French soldier that Paul kills.


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* TheseHandsHaveKilled: Paul has a crisis of conscience after killing Duval, the Frenchman who wound up in the shell hole with him. It's the first time he knows that he has killed with his own hands.

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* CallBack: Fairly early in the film, as Paul and his squad are marching into a combat zone for the first time, there's a shot of Paul and several other soldiers looking back at the truck that dropped them off. At the end, after every soldier in that shot has been killed, the shot of each soldier looking back is repeated.

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* CallBack: CallBack:
** Early in the film, Kemmerich brags about his fancy, custom-made leather boots. Later, he dies, and Paul brings back his boots for Mueller to wear.
**
Fairly early in the film, as Paul and his squad are marching into a combat zone for the first time, there's a shot of Paul and several other soldiers looking back at the truck that dropped them off. At the end, after every soldier in that shot has been killed, the shot of each soldier looking back is repeated.
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* PhantomLimbPain: The gang goes to see Kemmerich in the hospital. He complains of terrible pain in his right foot. The camera pans down to reveal that his right foot has been amputated.
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* GetAHoldOfYourselfMan: After the men have spent five days in a bunker under enemy bombardment, one of Paul's friends snaps under the strain. He starts screaming and tries to get out. Kat punches him in the face a couple fo times.

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* GetAHoldOfYourselfMan: After the men have spent five days in a bunker under enemy bombardment, one of Paul's friends snaps under the strain. He starts screaming and tries to get out. Kat punches him in the face a couple fo times.of times and stops him from escaping. (Moments later Kemmerick similarly snaps, succeeds in running out of the bunker, and is mortally wounded.)

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This material seemed to me to be too lengthy for a work page but I didn't want to delete it, so I moved it to the Analysis namespace.


* RuleOfSymbolism:
** The weapons of war are terrifying inventions that bring only pain. While words can grasp at the horrors of war, they can never fully express them. Reading about war can only hint at the devastation of battle: only through experience can you truly understand. Both the original novel and Milestone's adaptation attempt to grasp at war's horrors through a visual medium ... knowing full well that you can only use art to begin to touch the hellscape of war. Milestone's goal was to depict the ghastly injures and death these weapons dealt. And, while the film's imagery might not completely encompass the real experience, it's pretty damn unsettling. The major weapons featured in the movie are rifles, shells, bombs, barbed wire, machine guns, and hand-to-hand armaments such as knives, bayonets, and spades. That's a lot of weapons. Even by today's standards, the battles scenes are super gruesome, even with black-and-white blood. Machine guns mow down lines of men. Soldiers trip over barbed wire, shredding their flesh in the process. The hand-to-hand combat scene in the trenches is harrowing — watching swarms of men stab, slash, and beat each other in claustrophobic quarters is ''not'' meant to be taken lightly. Tanks and airplanes made their wartime debut during UsefulNotes/WorldWarI. Kat mentions both to Paul while discussing the Germans' struggles to defend their lines... right before being killed by an air raid. Though the high war-tech invented for WWI is ''mentioned'' in the film, we don't actually see a lot of it in action. This was likely due to technical limitations.
** Wartime trauma is another huge factor in the adaptation. Beyond the physical violence, Milestone also focuses on the psychological trauma the weapons of WWI reaped. During Paul's first stint on the Front, we begin to see the mental toll they have on the soldiers. For one thing the soldiers had nearly an entire week of no sleep because of the constant noise of bombs going off near and even worse, they never knew when one of those shells would hit. Kemmerick suffers even worse than Paul, mentally eroding to the point that he tries to leave the safety of the dugout. Other cases of mental anguish include Paul's depression over killing the French soldier and Albert's suicidal longing after learning his leg has been amputated. At that's not even getting into "[[ShellShockedVeteran shell shock]]" for ''after'' the war ends. Paul suffers from depression when he returns home. Kemmerick has nightmares after witnessing Behn's death, and Paul feels guilty over surviving when his friends haven't.
** Due to constant bombardments and barrages of men advancing into machine-gun fire, The appropriately named No Man's Land is a nightmarescape of mud, shell holes, gnarled barbed wire, splintered trees, and, of course, corpses scattered about like seeds thrown onto a field. Consider Paul's experience during the German offensive. The church—a holy place where men are meant to gather to worship—is blasted into ruins. The graveyard next to it is hit with shells, literally raising the dead from their graves to mingle among the living. When Paul takes cover in the crater, he's forced to stab a French soldier. He then attempts to comfort the soldier by providing him a drink, but all he has to offer is muddied, bloody water lying stagnant at the bottom of the crater. Even a basic, life-sustaining necessity such as clean water is absent within No Man's Land. In comparison, when the soldiers take leave from the Front, they're often surrounded by pastoral nature. They eat their fill of beans and bread and lie beneath a tree that remains intact rather than uprooted by shell blasts. That's just how tough times are. Another time, Paul and his comrades find a river to bathe in. With more than enough water to drink, the soldiers get to clean away the dirt and grime that covers them during their time at the Front. Again, they're excited by a cold river. The differences in the landscape help show how the soldiers' states of mind change—it's all location. Away from the Front, the landscape can provide the physical needs of the soldier, allowing him to turn his attention to more social considerations. He can discuss the purpose and worth of the war, take care of his body by eating and bathing…and even get close to hot French girls. But every aspect of No Man's Land requires the soldier to focus on survival and only survival. Every broken tree, muddied crater, and bombed-out building reminds us that death is an ever-present danger—death of the soldiers, death of nature, death of everything.
** Kemmerick's boots have Italian leather, comfy insoles, the works. But the previous owner was gunned down while wearing them. The owner before him? Blown up. The owner before the owner before him? Shredded by shrapnel. We're first introduced to this jinxed pair of footwear when Kemmerick parades them about during boot camp. He places them jokingly on Mueller's shoulders. Since the army lives on its feet, a soldier needs proper boots for the long marches and days of work—especially on the Western Front. Between the mud and unhygienic conditions, soldiers require good boots to prevent blisters, frostbite, and foot fungus. Later, Kemmerick's wounded by shrapnel. As he lies dying in a field hospital, Paul and his friends visit him and Mueller notices the boots. Mueller asks Kemmerick if he can have the boots since he won't need them. As the group leaves, Mueller confesses to Paul he didn't want to get the boots over Paul. Mueller's confession shows us how the war has changed these young men. Mueller has to think about his survival at all times. Although asking for the boots upsets Kemmerick—it's basically the equivalent of saying Kemmerick would die. Kemmerick can't use the boots, but another soldier can. In fact, they could save another soldier's life. We see that survival has to always be at the forefront in a soldier's mind, sacrificing more "civilized" considerations such as decorum and thoughtfulness. In the end, Kemmerick does die, and Paul takes the boots for Mueller. Mueller's shown proudly marching with his new boots, but he's injured during an offensive in No Man's Land. Next, we see Peter marching in the boots—and then Peter's shown being killed while going over the top.
** "Oscar" --a rat that hangs out with the soliders-- chews on a piece of the soldiers' bread, and Kat throws his shoe at the little beastie. While Kat tosses the bread aside, Tjaden retorts he'd regret that choice. Rats aren't thought of as being so brazen about snatching food from people, but in the trenches, the humans have entered the rats' world: the world of survival—kill or be killed; eat or be eaten. Later, the men are starving and Kat returns from foraging with stale bread and no butter—the same food that Oscar foraged from the soldiers earlier. Rats come pouring into their dugout and the soldiers begin killing them with their spades. Immediately afterward, the Allied offensive starts, and we see the soldiers fighting in the trenches. They use all manner of hand-to-hand weapons to kill each other, including the same spades they used to kill the rats. The contrast shows us the equalizing of man and beast as a result of the war. Both live in holes; both forage for food; both fight, kill, and bite to survive. The film suggests that we shouldn't talk about "dogs of war" so much as "rats of war."

to:

* RuleOfSymbolism:
** The weapons of war are terrifying inventions that bring only pain. While words can grasp at
RuleOfSymbolism: See the horrors of war, they can never fully express them. Reading about war can only hint at the devastation of battle: only through experience can you truly understand. Both the original novel and Milestone's adaptation attempt to grasp at war's horrors through a visual medium ... knowing full well that you can only Analysis page for use art to begin to touch the hellscape of war. Milestone's goal was to depict the ghastly injures and death these weapons dealt. And, while the film's imagery might not completely encompass the real experience, it's pretty damn unsettling. The major weapons featured symbolism in the movie are rifles, shells, bombs, barbed wire, machine guns, and hand-to-hand armaments such as knives, bayonets, and spades. That's a lot of weapons. Even by today's standards, the battles scenes are super gruesome, even with black-and-white blood. Machine guns mow down lines of men. Soldiers trip over barbed wire, shredding their flesh in the process. The hand-to-hand combat scene in the trenches is harrowing — watching swarms of men stab, slash, and beat each other in claustrophobic quarters is ''not'' meant to be taken lightly. Tanks and airplanes made their wartime debut during UsefulNotes/WorldWarI. Kat mentions both to Paul while discussing the Germans' struggles to defend their lines... right before being killed by an air raid. Though the high war-tech invented for WWI is ''mentioned'' in the film, we don't actually see a lot of it in action. This was likely due to technical limitations.
** Wartime trauma is another huge factor in the adaptation. Beyond the physical violence, Milestone also focuses on the psychological trauma the weapons of WWI reaped. During Paul's first stint on the Front, we begin to see the mental toll they have on the soldiers. For one thing the soldiers had nearly an entire week of no sleep because of the constant noise of bombs going off near and even worse, they never knew when one of those shells would hit. Kemmerick suffers even worse than Paul, mentally eroding to the point that he tries to leave the safety of the dugout. Other cases of mental anguish include Paul's depression over killing the French soldier and Albert's suicidal longing after learning his leg has been amputated. At that's not even getting into "[[ShellShockedVeteran shell shock]]" for ''after'' the war ends. Paul suffers from depression when he returns home. Kemmerick has nightmares after witnessing Behn's death, and Paul feels guilty over surviving when his friends haven't.
** Due to constant bombardments and barrages of men advancing into machine-gun fire, The appropriately named No Man's Land is a nightmarescape of mud, shell holes, gnarled barbed wire, splintered trees, and, of course, corpses scattered about like seeds thrown onto a field. Consider Paul's experience during the German offensive. The church—a holy place where men are meant to gather to worship—is blasted into ruins. The graveyard next to it is hit with shells, literally raising the dead from their graves to mingle among the living. When Paul takes cover in the crater, he's forced to stab a French soldier. He then attempts to comfort the soldier by providing him a drink, but all he has to offer is muddied, bloody water lying stagnant at the bottom of the crater. Even a basic, life-sustaining necessity such as clean water is absent within No Man's Land. In comparison, when the soldiers take leave from the Front, they're often surrounded by pastoral nature. They eat their fill of beans and bread and lie beneath a tree that remains intact rather than uprooted by shell blasts. That's just how tough times are. Another time, Paul and his comrades find a river to bathe in. With more than enough water to drink, the soldiers get to clean away the dirt and grime that covers them during their time at the Front. Again, they're excited by a cold river. The differences in the landscape help show how the soldiers' states of mind change—it's all location. Away from the Front, the landscape can provide the physical needs of the soldier, allowing him to turn his attention to more social considerations. He can discuss the purpose and worth of the war, take care of his body by eating and bathing…and even get close to hot French girls. But every aspect of No Man's Land requires the soldier to focus on survival and only survival. Every broken tree, muddied crater, and bombed-out building reminds us that death is an ever-present danger—death of the soldiers, death of nature, death of everything.
** Kemmerick's boots have Italian leather, comfy insoles, the works. But the previous owner was gunned down while wearing them. The owner before him? Blown up. The owner before the owner before him? Shredded by shrapnel. We're first introduced to this jinxed pair of footwear when Kemmerick parades them about during boot camp. He places them jokingly on Mueller's shoulders. Since the army lives on its feet, a soldier needs proper boots for the long marches and days of work—especially on the Western Front. Between the mud and unhygienic conditions, soldiers require good boots to prevent blisters, frostbite, and foot fungus. Later, Kemmerick's wounded by shrapnel. As he lies dying in a field hospital, Paul and his friends visit him and Mueller notices the boots. Mueller asks Kemmerick if he can have the boots since he won't need them. As the group leaves, Mueller confesses to Paul he didn't want to get the boots over Paul. Mueller's confession shows us how the war has changed these young men. Mueller has to think about his survival at all times. Although asking for the boots upsets Kemmerick—it's basically the equivalent of saying Kemmerick would die. Kemmerick can't use the boots, but another soldier can. In fact, they could save another soldier's life. We see that survival has to always be at the forefront in a soldier's mind, sacrificing more "civilized" considerations such as decorum and thoughtfulness. In the end, Kemmerick does die, and Paul takes the boots for Mueller. Mueller's shown proudly marching with his new boots, but he's injured during an offensive in No Man's Land. Next, we see Peter marching in the boots—and then Peter's shown being killed while going over the top.
** "Oscar" --a rat that hangs out with the soliders-- chews on a piece of the soldiers' bread, and Kat throws his shoe at the little beastie. While Kat tosses the bread aside, Tjaden retorts he'd regret that choice. Rats aren't thought of as being so brazen about snatching food from people, but in the trenches, the humans have entered the rats' world: the world of survival—kill or be killed; eat or be eaten. Later, the men are starving and Kat returns from foraging with stale bread and no butter—the same food that Oscar foraged from the soldiers earlier. Rats come pouring into their dugout and the soldiers begin killing them with their spades. Immediately afterward, the Allied offensive starts, and we see the soldiers fighting in the trenches. They use all manner of hand-to-hand weapons to kill each other, including the same spades they used to kill the rats. The contrast shows us the equalizing of man and beast as a result of the war. Both live in holes; both forage for food; both fight, kill, and bite to survive. The film suggests that we shouldn't talk about "dogs of war" so much as "rats of war."
film.
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* GetAHoldOfYourselfMan: After the men have spent five days in a bunker under enemy bombardment, one of Paul's friends snaps under the strain. He starts screaming and tries to get out. Kat punches him in the face a couple fo times.

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* OldSoldier: Kat, the trench warfare veteran who tells Paul and the other newbies stuff like how different shells sound different, and when you can ignore them and when you should dive for cover immediately.



** If you take a good look at Kantorek's blackboard behind him. The phrase he's scrawled there is the first line of Creator/{{Homer}}'s ''Literature/TheOdyssey'', which roughly translates to "Tell me, oh Muse, of that ingenious hero who traveled far and wide." This line supports Kantorek's worldview and provides us an insight into his militaristic fervor. Having been raised on the classics like ''Literature/TheIliad'' and ''The Odyssey'', Kantorek sees war as something glorious, an event where nations invest young men and get worldly, ingenious heroes. And his own words follow a similar ideal: "Here is a glorious beginning for your lives. The field of honor calls you." Of course, he believes that. His experience of war comes from the ancient Greeks, who didn't exactly like to write epic poems about losers or dead men. Odysseus went to war and then had an epic poem written about him.
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* TheScrounger: Kat. When Paul and the other new recruits join their combat unit, they ask about food, and are told that the only canteen in the area is Kat, and if there's food within 25 miles, he'll find it. Cue Kat stealing an entire pig from a supply train.

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** Paul's death is depicted [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nMlDPsRwZE4 like that.]]

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** Paul's death is depicted [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nMlDPsRwZE4 like that.]]]]. His hand goes limp as he's shot by a sniper, while reaching for a butterfly that has landed just outside of the trench.


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* DrillSergeantNasty: Himmelstoss, who clearly takes petty pleasure in making the boys miserable during boot camp.
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* ItWillNeverCatchOn: In the opening scene Mr. Meyer expresses confidence the war will end in a few months.

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* ItWillNeverCatchOn: In the opening scene Mr. Meyer expresses confidence the war will end in a few months. That's soon followed by Kantorek the jackass teacher saying "I believe it will be a quick war. There will be few losses."
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* ItWillNeverCatchOn: In the opening scene Mr. Meyer expresses confidence the war will end in a few months.
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Compare the German-language 2022 adaptation, ''Film/{{All Quiet on the Western Front|2022}}''.

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Compare the contemporary German film ''Film/Westfront1918''. See also the first German-language 2022 adaptation, 2022's ''Film/{{All Quiet on the Western Front|2022}}''.
Front|2022}}''.
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* BookEnds: Just after the beginning of the film Professor Katnorek gives a speech to Paul and friends on the 'wonders' of joining the German army and manages to persuade them to enlist for the 'fatherland' and to do their bit for Germany. Near the end of the film Paul catches his former teacher once again giving his speech to even younger looking men. This strongly implies that Professor Katnorek has done this many times during the war and one wonders how many young men he managed to persuade to fight via propaganda.


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* BrutalHonesty: When Paul's schoolmaster urges him to tell the next batch of recruits how [[WarIsGlorious glorious it is to be a soldier]], he hesitates for a bit before telling them ''[[WarIsHell exactly]]'' how brutal and dehumanizing the experience is and that they're being sent to their deaths like his class before them.


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* SmallRoleBigImpact: The French soldier Duval is just a RedShirt with no lines, but his death at Paul's hands is memorable in a disturbing way, and gives the latter a moment of HeroicBSOD.
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It is the first film adaptation of Erich Maria Remarque's iconic 1929 novel, ''Literature/AllQuietOnTheWesternFront''. UsefulNotes/WorldWarI is raging in Europe. A group of classmates, including protagonist Paul Bäumer (Creator/LewAyres) are goaded into enlisting by their jingoistic teacher, Kantorek. The boys go to boot camp on a wave of patriotic fervor, but their brutal boot camp experience under vicious martinet Corporal Himmelstoss saps them of their enthusiasm even before they are sent to the front line.

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It is the first film adaptation of Erich Maria Remarque's iconic 1929 novel, ''Literature/AllQuietOnTheWesternFront''. UsefulNotes/WorldWarI is raging in Europe. A group of German classmates, including protagonist Paul Bäumer (Creator/LewAyres) are goaded into enlisting by their jingoistic teacher, Kantorek. The boys go to boot camp on a wave of patriotic fervor, but their brutal boot camp experience under vicious martinet Corporal Himmelstoss saps them of their enthusiasm even before they are sent to the front line.
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* ArmchairMilitary: When Paul goes home on leave, the civilians have the audacity to dismiss his [[WarIsHell experiences in the war]] by saying he hasn't seen the whole of it compared to them who apparently know a lot more, as they are sitting around a table, smoking cigars and moving pieces around a map. All Paul can do is sit and [[DisapprovingLook elicit an expression of sombre disbelief]].


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* BringMyBrownPants: Kat tells a newbie that it happens to everybody.


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* GoodWeaponEvilWeapon: The sergeant finds a private who has cut serrations into his bayonet, and explains that the opposition will not like this and do particularly nasty things to him if they catch him. The sergeant then goes on to explain that in hand-to-hand trench warfare, the best thing is to [[CombatPragmatist lop the opponent's head off with a short-handled shovel]].


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* TheOner: A rather long shot of French soldiers getting mowed down.


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* ShootTheShaggyDog: The film follows [[JustForFun/HowToSurviveAWarMovie war movie conventions]] rigorously right up to the third act, where the main characters are picked off one by one in trench warfare, until they are all dead. The AudienceSurrogate Paul survives long enough to stand up while sketching a butterfly in the trenches on [[HopeSpot the day of the Armistice, promptly getting shot and becoming the last casualty of UsefulNotes/WorldWarI.]] The closing title card? "[[TitleDrop All Quiet On The Western Front]]." All this is, of course, true to the spirit of the book.


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* WarIsHell: German schoolboys naively choose to go to war only to find a world of brutal training and pointless death. It is also considered one of the greatest films ever made, and one of the finest [[ValuesResonance anti-war films ever made, if not the best]]. The fight scenes are so realistic that they are still being used in documentaries about WWI to this day.
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[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/all-quiet_0_8499.jpg]]
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''All Quiet on the Western Front'' is a 1930 film directed by Creator/LewisMilestone.

It is the first film adaptation of Erich Maria Remarque's iconic 1929 novel, ''Literature/AllQuietOnTheWesternFront''. UsefulNotes/WorldWarI is raging in Europe. A group of classmates, including protagonist Paul Bäumer (Creator/LewAyres) are goaded into enlisting by their jingoistic teacher, Kantorek. The boys go to boot camp on a wave of patriotic fervor, but their brutal boot camp experience under vicious martinet Corporal Himmelstoss saps them of their enthusiasm even before they are sent to the front line.

The front line, of course, is a place of nightmarish horror. One of the classmates is killed in their very first day in combat. The boys are taken under wing by Corporal "Kat" Katzinsky (Louis Wolheim) who becomes a sort of father figure. The brutality of the war strips Paul of his innocence. As his friends die one by one, Paul struggles to survive, and to hold on to something of his humanity.

Compare the German-language 2022 adaptation, ''Film/{{All Quiet on the Western Front|2022}}''.

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!!Tropes:

* AscendedExtra: Behm and Kemmerich get more scenes, given how the film shows the recruitment and training of the soldiers rather than just describing it.
* AgeLift: Tjaden is only a few years older than Paul and his classmates in book, but is played by forty-two year old Slim Summerville in this film.
* BloodlessCarnage: During the charge scene, not a lot of wounds are shown, with the exception of some tears in the back of German soldiers and two bloody hands holding on to barbed wire. Also played straight during the machine gun scene in the charge, where loads and loads of French soldiers are mowed down, yet their wounds are not shown.
* ButterflyOfDeathAndRebirth: When Paul goes home he sees his sister's butterfly collection. [[spoiler:In the final scene Paul is shot and killed while reaching for a butterfly.]]
* CallBack: Fairly early in the film, as Paul and his squad are marching into a combat zone for the first time, there's a shot of Paul and several other soldiers looking back at the truck that dropped them off. At the end, after every soldier in that shot has been killed, the shot of each soldier looking back is repeated.
* TheCameo: Raymond Griffith had a very successful career as the star of a series of comedies in the 1920s. Unfortunately for him, he could not raise his voice above a whisper due to a childhood bout of diptheria, so his acting career ended with the debut of the talkies. This film has his final role, a memorable non-speaking part as a French soldier that Paul kills.
* CatapultNightmare: Kemmerich has a nightmare about Behn after Behn is killed.
* DeadHandShot:
** Paul's death is depicted [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nMlDPsRwZE4 like that.]]
** The most shocking scene in the whole movie shows an enemy soldier who is part of an attack on Paul's unit. As the soldier is reaching for a line of barbed wire, an artillery shell explodes. When the smoke clears, [[AnArmAndALeg his severed hands]] are still clutching the wire.
* DoesThatSoundLikeFunToYou: When on leave, Paul goes back to his old classroom to see Kantorek using the same speech he told his class on another group of young innocent students. Excited to see one of his former students drop in, Kantorek encourages Paul to tell them how grand being in the front lines are. To his credit, Paul is really uncomfortable and insists he has nothing to say, but caves to his teacher's demands... and flat out tells the students that WarIsHell and [[TakeThat accuses their teacher of sending them to their deaths like his class before them]]. Because the students there haven't experienced it for themselves, virtually all of them quickly denounce him as a defeatist.
* InsertCameo: Paul's death scene shows his hand reaching for a butterfly; then a shot is heard, and the hand goes limp in death. The hand in the scene belongs to director Lewis Milestone.
* LudicrousGibs: Very few characters die in subtle ways. Almost all the French soldiers charging and the Germans get gibbed by artillery shells.
* NotEvenBotheringWithTheAccent: The German characters are played by American actors, who speak with American accents. This, however, is intentional TranslationConvention, in order to show American movie-goers just how much like us the German protagonists really are.
* RuleOfSymbolism:
** The weapons of war are terrifying inventions that bring only pain. While words can grasp at the horrors of war, they can never fully express them. Reading about war can only hint at the devastation of battle: only through experience can you truly understand. Both the original novel and Milestone's adaptation attempt to grasp at war's horrors through a visual medium ... knowing full well that you can only use art to begin to touch the hellscape of war. Milestone's goal was to depict the ghastly injures and death these weapons dealt. And, while the film's imagery might not completely encompass the real experience, it's pretty damn unsettling. The major weapons featured in the movie are rifles, shells, bombs, barbed wire, machine guns, and hand-to-hand armaments such as knives, bayonets, and spades. That's a lot of weapons. Even by today's standards, the battles scenes are super gruesome, even with black-and-white blood. Machine guns mow down lines of men. Soldiers trip over barbed wire, shredding their flesh in the process. The hand-to-hand combat scene in the trenches is harrowing — watching swarms of men stab, slash, and beat each other in claustrophobic quarters is ''not'' meant to be taken lightly. Tanks and airplanes made their wartime debut during UsefulNotes/WorldWarI. Kat mentions both to Paul while discussing the Germans' struggles to defend their lines... right before being killed by an air raid. Though the high war-tech invented for WWI is ''mentioned'' in the film, we don't actually see a lot of it in action. This was likely due to technical limitations.
** Wartime trauma is another huge factor in the adaptation. Beyond the physical violence, Milestone also focuses on the psychological trauma the weapons of WWI reaped. During Paul's first stint on the Front, we begin to see the mental toll they have on the soldiers. For one thing the soldiers had nearly an entire week of no sleep because of the constant noise of bombs going off near and even worse, they never knew when one of those shells would hit. Kemmerick suffers even worse than Paul, mentally eroding to the point that he tries to leave the safety of the dugout. Other cases of mental anguish include Paul's depression over killing the French soldier and Albert's suicidal longing after learning his leg has been amputated. At that's not even getting into "[[ShellShockedVeteran shell shock]]" for ''after'' the war ends. Paul suffers from depression when he returns home. Kemmerick has nightmares after witnessing Behn's death, and Paul feels guilty over surviving when his friends haven't.
** Due to constant bombardments and barrages of men advancing into machine-gun fire, The appropriately named No Man's Land is a nightmarescape of mud, shell holes, gnarled barbed wire, splintered trees, and, of course, corpses scattered about like seeds thrown onto a field. Consider Paul's experience during the German offensive. The church—a holy place where men are meant to gather to worship—is blasted into ruins. The graveyard next to it is hit with shells, literally raising the dead from their graves to mingle among the living. When Paul takes cover in the crater, he's forced to stab a French soldier. He then attempts to comfort the soldier by providing him a drink, but all he has to offer is muddied, bloody water lying stagnant at the bottom of the crater. Even a basic, life-sustaining necessity such as clean water is absent within No Man's Land. In comparison, when the soldiers take leave from the Front, they're often surrounded by pastoral nature. They eat their fill of beans and bread and lie beneath a tree that remains intact rather than uprooted by shell blasts. That's just how tough times are. Another time, Paul and his comrades find a river to bathe in. With more than enough water to drink, the soldiers get to clean away the dirt and grime that covers them during their time at the Front. Again, they're excited by a cold river. The differences in the landscape help show how the soldiers' states of mind change—it's all location. Away from the Front, the landscape can provide the physical needs of the soldier, allowing him to turn his attention to more social considerations. He can discuss the purpose and worth of the war, take care of his body by eating and bathing…and even get close to hot French girls. But every aspect of No Man's Land requires the soldier to focus on survival and only survival. Every broken tree, muddied crater, and bombed-out building reminds us that death is an ever-present danger—death of the soldiers, death of nature, death of everything.
** Kemmerick's boots have Italian leather, comfy insoles, the works. But the previous owner was gunned down while wearing them. The owner before him? Blown up. The owner before the owner before him? Shredded by shrapnel. We're first introduced to this jinxed pair of footwear when Kemmerick parades them about during boot camp. He places them jokingly on Mueller's shoulders. Since the army lives on its feet, a soldier needs proper boots for the long marches and days of work—especially on the Western Front. Between the mud and unhygienic conditions, soldiers require good boots to prevent blisters, frostbite, and foot fungus. Later, Kemmerick's wounded by shrapnel. As he lies dying in a field hospital, Paul and his friends visit him and Mueller notices the boots. Mueller asks Kemmerick if he can have the boots since he won't need them. As the group leaves, Mueller confesses to Paul he didn't want to get the boots over Paul. Mueller's confession shows us how the war has changed these young men. Mueller has to think about his survival at all times. Although asking for the boots upsets Kemmerick—it's basically the equivalent of saying Kemmerick would die. Kemmerick can't use the boots, but another soldier can. In fact, they could save another soldier's life. We see that survival has to always be at the forefront in a soldier's mind, sacrificing more "civilized" considerations such as decorum and thoughtfulness. In the end, Kemmerick does die, and Paul takes the boots for Mueller. Mueller's shown proudly marching with his new boots, but he's injured during an offensive in No Man's Land. Next, we see Peter marching in the boots—and then Peter's shown being killed while going over the top.
** If you take a good look at Kantorek's blackboard behind him. The phrase he's scrawled there is the first line of Creator/{{Homer}}'s ''Literature/TheOdyssey'', which roughly translates to "Tell me, oh Muse, of that ingenious hero who traveled far and wide." This line supports Kantorek's worldview and provides us an insight into his militaristic fervor. Having been raised on the classics like ''Literature/TheIliad'' and ''The Odyssey'', Kantorek sees war as something glorious, an event where nations invest young men and get worldly, ingenious heroes. And his own words follow a similar ideal: "Here is a glorious beginning for your lives. The field of honor calls you." Of course, he believes that. His experience of war comes from the ancient Greeks, who didn't exactly like to write epic poems about losers or dead men. Odysseus went to war and then had an epic poem written about him.
** "Oscar" --a rat that hangs out with the soliders-- chews on a piece of the soldiers' bread, and Kat throws his shoe at the little beastie. While Kat tosses the bread aside, Tjaden retorts he'd regret that choice. Rats aren't thought of as being so brazen about snatching food from people, but in the trenches, the humans have entered the rats' world: the world of survival—kill or be killed; eat or be eaten. Later, the men are starving and Kat returns from foraging with stale bread and no butter—the same food that Oscar foraged from the soldiers earlier. Rats come pouring into their dugout and the soldiers begin killing them with their spades. Immediately afterward, the Allied offensive starts, and we see the soldiers fighting in the trenches. They use all manner of hand-to-hand weapons to kill each other, including the same spades they used to kill the rats. The contrast shows us the equalizing of man and beast as a result of the war. Both live in holes; both forage for food; both fight, kill, and bite to survive. The film suggests that we shouldn't talk about "dogs of war" so much as "rats of war."
* SexyDiscretionShot: When Paul is in bed with a French girl, the camera remains pointing at the opposite wall while they talk.
* SparedByTheAdaptation: Leer is killed near the end of the book, but survives the battle where Paul is injured in the film and isn't among those who Tjaden lists as having died or been court-martialed once Paul gets back. Lieutenant Bertnick's death scene is also cut from the film.
* TrainingFromHell: While the book also had some training described in it, the film goes to great lengths to show not just how awful the training is, but also how ineffective it really was on the front lines, such as when Kat tells Paul and his classmates that a bayonet is pretty useless in a melee fight compared to a sharpened shovel.
* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: Himmelstoss is last seen charging along with other German soldiers. While the novel states he came out okay and became less of a JerkAss, the film seems to imply that [[KilledByTheAdaptation he died during that particular attack]].


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