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IMDbPro

A Time to Love and a Time to Die

  • 1958
  • Approved
  • 2h 12m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
3.9K
YOUR RATING
John Gavin and Liselotte Pulver in A Time to Love and a Time to Die (1958)
On the Russian front in 1944 German Private Ernst Graeber receives a leave and visits his family in Germany but Germany isn't the same country he left behind.
Play trailer2:46
1 Video
25 Photos
DramaRomanceWar

On the Russian front in 1944, German private Ernst Graeber goes on leave and visits his family in Germany but this isn't the same country he left behind.On the Russian front in 1944, German private Ernst Graeber goes on leave and visits his family in Germany but this isn't the same country he left behind.On the Russian front in 1944, German private Ernst Graeber goes on leave and visits his family in Germany but this isn't the same country he left behind.

  • Director
    • Douglas Sirk
  • Writers
    • Orin Jannings
    • Erich Maria Remarque
  • Stars
    • John Gavin
    • Liselotte Pulver
    • Jock Mahoney
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    3.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Douglas Sirk
    • Writers
      • Orin Jannings
      • Erich Maria Remarque
    • Stars
      • John Gavin
      • Liselotte Pulver
      • Jock Mahoney
    • 26User reviews
    • 28Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 1 win & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:46
    Trailer

    Photos25

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    Top cast30

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    John Gavin
    John Gavin
    • Ernst Graeber
    Liselotte Pulver
    Liselotte Pulver
    • Elizabeth Kruse
    • (as Lilo Pulver)
    Jock Mahoney
    Jock Mahoney
    • Immerman
    Don DeFore
    Don DeFore
    • Boettcher
    Keenan Wynn
    Keenan Wynn
    • Reuter
    Erich Maria Remarque
    Erich Maria Remarque
    • Professor Pohlmann
    Dieter Borsche
    Dieter Borsche
    • Captain Rahe
    Barbara Rütting
    Barbara Rütting
    • Woman Guerrilla
    Thayer David
    Thayer David
    • Oscar Binding
    Charles Regnier
    Charles Regnier
    • Joseph
    Dorothea Wieck
    Dorothea Wieck
    • Frau Lieser
    Kurt Meisel
    Kurt Meisel
    • Heini
    Agnes Windeck
    Agnes Windeck
    • Frau Witte
    Clancy Cooper
    Clancy Cooper
    • Sauer
    John Van Dreelen
    John Van Dreelen
    • Political Officer
    Klaus Kinski
    Klaus Kinski
    • Gestapo Lieutenant
    Alice Treff
    Alice Treff
    • Frau Langer
    Alexander Engel
    • Mad Air Raid Warden
    • Director
      • Douglas Sirk
    • Writers
      • Orin Jannings
      • Erich Maria Remarque
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews26

    7.63.9K
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    Featured reviews

    7ma-cortes

    Classy movie of the Fifties about a deep romantic story dealing with a couple of lovers in painful circumstances

    It is a lush rendition set In 1944, a company of German soldiers on the Russian front are numbed by the massacres and violence of a bloody war , there Private Ernst Graeber (John Gavin) is given a furlough and he goes back home in Germany, as he finds his home bombed , then hopelessly looking for his parents, but also meets a beautiful girl called Elizabeth Kruse (Lilo Pulver) with whom he falls in love . Both of them attempt to survive from a world full of slaughter , ambition and hatred . The are happily joined, only to be separated when he is forced to return to the Russian front. Born out of the blazing passions of war! The great love story of World War II by the author of "All Quiet on the Western Front"...There Was Nothing Else in the World Now...But Them! No shame, no law, only love and each other...and the thunder of their pounding hearts...

    This Douglas Sirk's penultimate masterpiece turns to be an interesting and thought-provoking film showing the human side of the enemy , including romance , emotion , thrills , and hardships and horror of an unfinished war, giving a sympathetic treatment of Germans opposited to Hitler' policies. It rests on a sad simmetry between the scenes at the Russian front and the central section in the bombed home-town . An affectionate love story with uncommon compassionate portrayal of Germans that takes place when a long awaited furlough comes through a good soldier : John Gavin and arriving in his half-ruined town he falls in love for a lovely girl : Lilo Pulver who results to be daughter of a political prisoner . This doomed and tragic romance exists non in spite of war, but because of it. This is one of few American films which portray World War II on the German side and the main roles were the German enemy. Based on a novel by prestigious author Erich Maria Remarque , published in 1954, who also wrote other successful war novels such as All Quiet on the Western Front by Lewis Milestone and The Arch of Triumph that were equally adapted ; in addition , playing himself a brief appearance . Starring John Gavin, credited to his real name Dana J. Hutton, gives a wooden acting in his film debut , while Lilo Pulver is better than him thanks to her sympathy , and attractive face . Good support cast , such as : Jock Mahoney , Don DeFore , Keenan Wynn , KlausvKinski, Thayer David , Barbara Rütting, among others.

    It contains a colorful and superb cinematography in Technicolor by Russell Metty, though a perfect remastering being extremely necessary . Being shot on location in Germany. Sensitive and enjoyable musical score by Miklos Rozsa . The motion picture was well directed by Douglas Sirk . He was a fundamental filmmaker who gave prestigious movies , usually collaborating with similar technicians as cameraman Russell Metty , Production Designer Alexander Golitzen , Producer Ross Hunter and writer George Zuckerman . Sirk directed a lot of classic melodramas such as : Never say goobye , Interlude , Summerstorm , The first legion , The lady pays off , Tarnished Angels , A time to love a time to die , Magnificent obsession , All that heaven allows , Written in the Wind . But he also directed other genres as WWII : Mystery submarine , Hitler's madmen ; Thrillers and Film Noir : Shockproof , Thunder on the hill , A scandal in Paris , Lured ; Historical : Attila with Jack Palance ; Adventures : Thunderbolt and Lightfoot with Hudson and Barbara Rush ; and even a Western : Taza . Rating : 7/10 , better than average . Worthwhile watching.
    7verna-a

    Powerful and poignant

    I can recommend this war film. Despite distracting weaknesses in production quality, the power of the material carries the viewer along very effectively. The scenario is the dying days of World War II from the perspective of a German soldier. This represents unusual material for Hollywood, and romantic leading man John Gavin is odd casting as the hero. Although his flashes of American pearly whites are incongruous, he and indeed all the actors do quite well in their parts although hampered by the forced pace of the direction and the artificial quality of the sound recording. Clearly overdubbed, the dialogue has the quality of a read- through in an indoor studio, despite most of the action being out-of-doors. The cinematography is quite good and the sets impressive as the soldier Ernst moves from the horrors of the Russian front to the heavily-bombed hometown where he returns on leave. Trying to find what has become of his parents, he receives little sympathy from his countrymen and women, who are deadened (or maddened) by the bombardment from the skies they are experiencing. Officialdom is represented by a range of repulsive types, underlining the moral ambiguity the hero is struggling with after his experiences on the front. Where in all this horror is anything worth living for? The answer comes in his developing relationship with the winsome Elizabeth, portrayed by a delightful actress whose name is not familiar to me. What hopes of happiness in the maelstrom of the times? A poignant moment comes when the couple fantasize where they would like to go for a honeymoon, only to reflect that as Germans they would be hated just about everywhere. I found this a memorable film.
    7jandesimpson

    A strange marriage of warfilm and Hollywood romanticism

    The films of Douglas Sirk have been variously described as "masterpieces" and "tosh". I think the answer lies somewhere in between. Certainly the series he made at the peak of his career for Universal International in the 'fifties are romantic melodramas of a superior kind. Although photographed in gaudy chocolate-box colours with soundtracks overladen with scores drenched in aural syrup and with sometimes the most outlandish of plots - "Magnificant Obsession" for instance - they have, beneath their surface glitter, a hard edged observation of an affluent American society struggling to come to grips with moral values - "All that Heaven Allows" and "Imitation of Life" are particularly good examples. But, interesting as these film are, it is the odd man out, a film set not in America at all but in Germany and the eastern front in the closing stages of the Second World War, "A Time to Love and a Time to Die", that, in spite of its not inconsiderable unevenness, could well be his most lasting legacy. Its most striking feature is that, notwithstanding its vastly different territory, it remains a Sirk film stylistically. The director almost seems to be signing his signature with the shot of pink blossom against the opening and closing credits. Although the outer sections of a German unit under shellfire on the eastern front are the very stuff of warscape recreation at their near best, it is the long central passage where the young German soldier - surprisingly well played by John Gavin - returns on leave to his heavily bombed town, that is the most Sirkian. Here, between devastating airaids, the hero forms an idyllic romantic attachment to a vaguely remembered friend from childhood followed by a whirlwind courtship. Amazingly for the last night of his leave the couple find, amidst all the devastation, an untouched house for the consumation of their marriage, where they are tended by a kindly frau who brings them a bottle of wine from the cellar. At this point the airaid is only glimpsed through the window. At an earlier point in the leave the couple dine in an unbelievably stylish restaurant, although here at least Sirk has the honesty to interrupt the proceedings with a pretty devastating direct hit which leaves one diner running is a sea of flames. If I have reservations about some of the romantic trappings of the scenes in Germany, I have none about the intense realism of the scenes on the eastern front. Would that the film was all on this level.
    10btbor

    ATime Machine....

    Re: Shannon Box's (sbox@gvtc.com) observation: "In short, this is an important film of significant value. Not because it is about history, but because it is about the redeeming quality of humanity, even if displayed in the setting of our onetime enemy." I would change the last of Shannon's statement to BECAUSE it is displayed in the setting of our onetime enemy. I saw this film shortly after it was released, in a theater on a USArmy post in Munich, Germany (McGraw Kaserne). At that time I was a student, especially of German history. This film provided an opportunity to be transported, for a few hours, into that closed society that our German friends had lived through but could not adequately convey to us. For those who enjoyed this film I would recommend reading "The Officer Factory" by Hans Helmut Kirst and Betrayed Skies (I have forgotten the author, but that is a first rate but largely unknown German pilot's story of his unwilling part in the air war). In short, this is a modern day All Quiet on the Western Front.
    7TheLittleSongbird

    All love on the western front

    While not liking every film Douglas Sirk did (my recent viewing of 'Magnificent Obsession' for example really underwhelmed me, sorry to anybody who disagrees and they undoubtedly exist), he was an interesting director and one of the most interesting when it came to melodramas which he specialised in. His melodramas are not for all tastes definitely, with some working much better than others, but at his best (i.e. 'Imitation of Life') his films were brilliant.

    'A Time to Love and a Time to Die', a title that some people are going to love and others are going to hate (even if it is an over-the-top one it is generally a poetic one in my view and pretty much sums up what the film is about), may not be one of Sirk's best. Having said that, while it is not perfect by any stretch, it is one of his most interesting with the subject matter for example and also one of his most underrated and deserving of more credit than it does.

    It isn't without problems in my view. It does run a little too long and it makes the film occasionally drawn out, the romance occasionally slows things down a bit. Some of the dialogue is rather soapy and could have had more punch, at least it is not as unintentionally camp or as sentiment-heavy as some of Sirk's other films.

    Did feel generally that debuting John Gavin, once you try to get over the fact that he is not remotely believable as a German, didn't do too badly a job, but inexperience does show initially where he doesn't always look comfortable.

    Mostly he plays his role with authority and pathos and Liselotte Pulver is both fetching and affecting as his love interest. Their chemistry is charming. Keenan Wynn and Charles Regnier are memorable in support, the whole cast in fact give everything they've got and make characters that sound on paper cliched and potentially sketchy interesting and certainly more plausible than those in other Sirk films, the conflict having tension too. 'A Time to Love and a Time to Die' looks great and is especially lavishly and not too glossily shot. Miklos Rozsa's score is sweeping and haunting.

    Sirk's direction has the sensitivity and passion that was missing in 'Magnificent Obsession' and the war scenes are staged very powerfully without being cluttered. While the script is not perfect it is sincere on the whole and as said it is not camp and sentimental. Furthermore, 'A Time to Love and a Time to Die' is an emotionally powerful film without being manipulative or over-sentimentalised, the war scenes are harrowing and poignant. The ending is shocking and really did appreciate that it didn't go the too pat route like other Sirk films did.

    Overall, interesting and powerful film that deserves more credit than it does. 7/10

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film was banned in Israel and the Soviet Union because of its uncommon, compassionate portrayal of Germans during WWII.
    • Goofs
      Keenan Wynn uses pounds instead of kilos to describe Don DeFore's wife's weight. Later Don DeFore also uses pounds instead of kilos when he mentions his wife having lost weight since he last saw her.
    • Quotes

      Ernst Graeber: You're more lovely every time I see you. Only this time, you look like the next time.

    • Crazy credits
      Actor Karl Ludwig Lindt is credited in opening credits but not in the closing credits.
    • Connections
      Edited into Raid on Rommel (1971)
    • Soundtracks
      A TIME TO LOVE
      (uncredited)

      Music by Miklós Rózsa

      Lyrics by Charles Henderson

      Performed by uncredited blonde in cabaret scene

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    FAQ18

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    • Midwest Premiere Happened When & Where?

    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 4, 1958 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • German
      • Russian
    • Also known as
      • There's a Time to Love
    • Filming locations
      • Hopfenohe, Grafenwöhr, Bavaria, Germany(Russian village in ruins)
    • Production company
      • Universal International Pictures (UI)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $50,623
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 2h 12m(132 min)
    • Sound mix
      • 4-Track Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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