March of Millions
March of Millions Die Flucht | |
---|---|
Genre | World War II film |
Written by | Gabriela Sperl |
Directed by | Kai Wessel |
Starring |
Maria Furtwängler Jean-Yves Berteloot Hanns Zischler Frédéric Vonhof |
Theme music composer | Enjott Schneider |
Country of origin | Germany |
Original language(s) | German |
No. of episodes | 2 |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Katrin Goetter, Nico Hofmann, Joachim Kosack, Sebastian Werninger |
Running time | 179 min (2 parts) |
Budget | €9 million |
Release | |
Original network | ARD |
Original release | 4 March – 5 March 2007 |
March of Millions is the international English title of the multi-award-winning three-hour German television film Die Flucht (The Flight). The film stars Maria Furtwängler in the role of Lena Gräfin von Mahlenberg, the leader of a small convoy of refugees from East Prussia (including French and Russian prisoners of war and forced labourers) fleeing the advancing Red Army in the winter of 1944–1945, and trying to survive uprooted in Bavaria in the aftermath of World War II. When first broadcast by ARD in two parts, on 4 and 5 March 2007, it drew 13.5 million viewers.[1]
The production was reported to have cost €9m and to have employed over 2,000 extras.[2]
The film was controversial for portraying German war-time suffering during the Evacuation of East Prussia (although a number of German atrocities were also shown or mentioned), and led to adverse comment from a foreign-policy adviser to the Polish president of the time, fearful of potential German claims to lands or property in East Prussia lost after the War.[3]
Awards
- 2007 Bambi award as "TV Event of the Year"
- 2007 Bavarian TV Award to Holly Fink (cinematographer)
- 2007 Romy award to Nico Hofmann (producer)
- 2007 Deutscher Fernsehpreis to Knut Loewe and Wiebke Kratz for Best Design
- 2007 Deutscher Fernsehpreis to Enjott Schneider for Best Music
- 2007 Deutscher Fernsehpreis to Gabriela Maria Schmeide as Best Supporting Actress
References
- ↑ Meza, Ed (Oct 5, 2007). "Germany Keen on Epic Productions". Variety. Retrieved 2009-11-19.
- ↑ Paterson, Tony (5 March 2007). "German TV Breaks Taboo with Story of Refugees". The Independent. Retrieved 2009-11-19.
- ↑ Kirschbaum, Erik (Mar 5, 2007). "Film depicting Germans as WW2 victims fires debate". Reuters. Retrieved 2009-11-19.