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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Calm_at_SeaCalm at Sea - Wikipedia

    Calm at Sea (French: La mer à l'aube) is a 2011 German / French drama film directed by Volker Schlöndorff. [1] [2] The film depicts the events leading to the 1941 execution of a group of French communists, including the 17-year-old Guy Môquet , as retaliation for the assassination of a German officer by the French resistance.

    • 90 minutes
  2. 4. Apr. 2012 · Calm at Sea: Directed by Volker Schlöndorff. With Léo-Paul Salmain, Marc Barbé, Ulrich Matthes, Jean-Marc Roulot. A teenager joins the resistance in Nazi-occupied France during World War II.

    • (797)
    • Drama, War
    • Volker Schlöndorff
    • 2012-04-04
  3. 20. Feb. 2014 · 6.4K views 9 years ago. Set in Nazi-occupied France in 1941, and based on a true story, Calm at Sea follows a young Frenchman who is sentenced to death, along with 26 of his countrymen, in ...

    • 2 Min.
    • 6,7K
    • TheFunFlicks
  4. Calm at Sea - Corinth Films. BOOK THIS FILM. LENGTH: 96 min. COUNTRY: France. YEAR: 2011. GENRE: Historical Drama. FORMATS: DCP, Blu-Ray & DVD. LANGUAGE: French and German w/English subtitles. DIRECTOR: Volker Schlöndorff.

  5. FRA/DEU 2011, Panorama. André Jung, Harald Schrott, Ulrich Matthes. La mer à l'aube | Calm At Sea | Das Meer am Morgen by Volker Schlöndorff. FRA/DEU 2011, Panorama. October 1941. Eighteen months into France’s occupation by German troops, young Communist members of the Resistance shoot dead an officer of the German Army.

  6. 12. Okt. 2016 · Calm at Sea, a narrative based on Moquet's final days, is one of the outstanding historical dramas that Corinth is especially proud to distribute. In October of 1941, two German officers are gunned down in broad daylight in Nantes by French Resistance members, the first instance of German blood to be shed in this region.

    • 2 Min.
    • 200
    • Corinth Films
  7. October 1941. Eighteen months into France’s occupation by German troops, young Communist members of the Resistance shoot dead an officer of the German Army. In retaliation, Hitler demands the deaths of 150 Frenchmen, as ‘retribution’. The targets are to be mostly young men believed to share the assassins’ political convictions.