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A Time to Love and a Time to Die

Play trailer Poster for A Time to Love and a Time to Die Released Jul 9, 1958,  2h 12m,  War Play Trailer Watchlist
Watchlist - - 4 Reviews Tomatometer 75% 250+ Ratings Popcornmeter
Tomatometer 4 Reviews 75% Popcornmeter 250+ Ratings
Retreating from the Russian front after the failure to take Moscow in 1944, German soldier Ernst Graeber (John Gavin) is granted a three-week furlough. He returns to his home village for the first time since he left two years before and is shocked to learn that his parents are among the thousands left dead or missing by the Allied bombing raids. Then he falls for the beautiful Elizabeth Kruse (Lilo Pulver), and the two attempt to begin a romance amidst the devastation and despair of the war.

Critics Reviews

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Jean-Luc Godard Cahiers du Cinéma This, anyhow, is what enchants me about Sirk: this delirious mixture of medieval and modern, sentimentality and subtlety, tame compositions and frenzied CinemaScope. Sep 1, 2021 Full Review Emanuel Levy EmanuelLevy.Com Rated: 4/5 •  Jun 17, 2005 Full Review

Audience Reviews

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Audience Member Conventional approach to WW2 drama, except told from the German side. Largely spoilt by John Gavin's wooden acting. Jock Mahoney would have been better in the lead, not in a bit part. Keenan Wynn lifts it whenever he appears. Directed by German, based on German book. Author has small part. He sums up his philosophy as need to believe in God. (Believe it if you want!) Rated 2 out of 5 stars 02/22/23 Full Review Audience Member A piece of marvellous and elegant film direction signed by Douglas Sirk. It has one of the best recreations of apocalyptic Germany\Russia during WWII ever filmed; with detailed and incredibly real-looking sets, beautiful yet merciless landscapes, and a characteristic lush cinematography that enhances the dread and destruction present everywhere. The central romance is a bit of light in such a dark place - even if John Gavin isn't the greatest actor coming out from Hollywood. What amazes me is how Sirk, with all the ingredients to make a sappy and unwatchable movie (over-sentimental writing, uninspired acting and overly dramatic music, for example), is capable of turning all that into such a splendid and moving work of art. A great film. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/07/23 Full Review
A Time to Love and a Time to Die

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Movie Info

Synopsis Retreating from the Russian front after the failure to take Moscow in 1944, German soldier Ernst Graeber (John Gavin) is granted a three-week furlough. He returns to his home village for the first time since he left two years before and is shocked to learn that his parents are among the thousands left dead or missing by the Allied bombing raids. Then he falls for the beautiful Elizabeth Kruse (Lilo Pulver), and the two attempt to begin a romance amidst the devastation and despair of the war.
Director
Douglas Sirk
Producer
Robert Arthur
Distributor
Universal Pictures
Production Co
Universal/Universal Int
Genre
War
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
Jul 9, 1958, Original
Runtime
2h 12m