Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - Looking for the film of German local battlefield in World War II.

Looking for the film of German local battlefield in World War II.

Film Bridge in the Former Yugoslavia (1969)

be in charge of/supervisor

Directed by ha Krvavac.

executant

Velimir 'Bata' Zivojinovic Perovic

produce

Produced by Posner Film Studio in Yugoslavia.

region

Yugoslavia

type

Classic World War II movies

abstract

1944, the second world war is coming to an end, and Germany, which is facing the east-west attack, is on the verge of failure. However, they still refused to give up. In order to save the crisis, the Germans planned to retreat from Greece to their own country via Yugoslavia. In order to retreat smoothly, they tried their best to keep a bridge that they had to pass on the way.

At the same time, a small group of Yugoslav guerrillas were ordered to blow up this high and dangerous bridge, and the task was extremely arduous. If we can blow up the bridge, we can block the German retreat, which is more conducive to counterattack. Of course, the Germans also understand the importance of this strategic bridge. They deployed a regiment of military guards and arranged for an expert against guerrillas, SS Colonel Hoffman, to sit in the barracks. The bridge is surrounded by strict security measures.

In the process of sneaking into the secret and approaching the target step by step, the guerrillas were unfortunately discovered by the German defenders. In order to shield all comrades from danger, a soldier stayed alone to stop the tenacious enemy. Unfortunately, after the injury, he shouted loudly that his retreating comrades threw grenades at himself, and as a result, he died and was not taken prisoner.

In order to blow up the bridge, the guerrillas found an engineer, but this engineer is the designer of the bridge. After a series of careful arrangements and soul-stirring struggles, the engineer finally blew up the bridge he designed and built.

Film background

Produced by Posner Film Studio in Yugoslavia, directed by Gakker Vavac, and played by Ba Chivo Ginovic, a famous Yugoslav meritorious actor. This film inherits the consistent style of Yugoslav films. The plot is ups and downs, the characters are lifelike, and planes, cannons and guerrillas highlight the true colors of heroes. The background of the film is 1944. At the end of World War II, Germany, sandwiched between East and West, was on the verge of failure. In order to save the crisis, the Germans will retreat from Greece to their own country via Yugoslavia. The story took place in Yugoslavia. The German retreat will pass through a strategic bridge, and a guerrilla was ordered to blow it up. If the bridge is blown up, it will block the retreat of the Germans and be more conducive to counterattack. Of course, the Germans also understood the importance of this bridge and deployed a regiment of guards. The bridge was heavily guarded, and another expert dealing with guerrillas, SS Colonel Hoffman, sat in the seat. After a series of thrilling and tortuous struggles, the task was completed with the help of bridge design engineers. This film was first released in China in the 1970s, when spiritual food was extremely scarce. So people born in the 1970s left an indelible impression on this film. They relished the plot and lines, learned to whistle and harmonica, and sang this famous episode-"Ah! Friend! Goodbye.