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TU PUNTUACIÓN
Historia de la Segunda Guerra Mundial sobre el esfuerzo de la Marina Real británica por derrotar al buque de guerra más poderoso de la Alemania nazi.Historia de la Segunda Guerra Mundial sobre el esfuerzo de la Marina Real británica por derrotar al buque de guerra más poderoso de la Alemania nazi.Historia de la Segunda Guerra Mundial sobre el esfuerzo de la Marina Real británica por derrotar al buque de guerra más poderoso de la Alemania nazi.
- Premios
- 2 nominaciones en total
Carl Möhner
- Kapitän Ernst Lindemann
- (as Carl Mohner)
Jack Gwillim
- Commodore Wilfrid Patterson - HMS King George V
- (as Jack Gwillam)
Argumento
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThe Bismarck's crew was made up of just over two thousand men. Following her sinking, only 114 survivors were rescued from the sea, 110 of them by HMS Dorsetshire and the Tribal-class destroyer HMS Maori. The rescue of survivors was called off by the captain of HMS Dorsetshire amid reports that a U-Boat may be in the area.
- PifiasThe characterization of Admiral Gunther Lütjens in this movie is wildly inaccurate. He is shown as a zealot, a fanatic, denying reality until the end. In fact, Lütjens was a thoughtful, even morose figure - some survivors claimed that his tendency for fatalism damaged their morale. Absurdly, on screen the Admiral tells his men to "remember you are Nazis!" Lütjens was not a Nazi (very much the opposite, to the extent that he famously refused to perform the Nazi salute for Hitler before the Bismarck set sail), nor were the vast majority of his officers and crew.
- Citas
[to his assistant Anne Davis, after the battle]
Captain Jonathan Shepard: Take a message: "Request pleasure of the company of Second Officer Anne Davis at dinner."
- Créditos adicionalesOpening credits prologue: LONDON MAY 1941
- ConexionesEdited from Duelo en el Atlántico Norte (1957)
Reseña destacada
Yes, my children, there was a time when movies knew nothing of CGI, and very difficult scenes of violence and destruction were given over to names like Buddy Gillespie, Wally Veevers, and Warren Newcombe, Howard and Teddy Lydecker. These men looked deep inside their childhoods, and started using miniatures, filmed at slow motion camera speeds to proportionately smooth out the movement of model ships, water, model airplanes, collapsing and exploding buildings, even crash model cars.
The most difficult miniature work was with water and the look of the water in relation to a miniature ship.
It was found that the larger the model ship, the more realistic the water looked, and in Columbia's "Sink the Bismarck", the ships were anywhere from 40-60 feet in length. The water body was an indoor pool over 300 ft. in diameter, surrounded by wind machines and under the floor of the tank, large hydraulic pistons created waves.
Can you imagine what fun that was? Blowing up and sinking these huge models.....it was a dream of mine for years.
Today, a scruffy kid sits in front of a computer and creates sea battles and catastrophes that are astoundingly realistic. He uses 1's and 0's.....nothing of the physical world.
Still, the destruction of the Bismarck, and the capstone piece, the massive explosion of the H.M.S. Hood amaze and awe anyone who watches this film today.
This is a WWII film for the ages, and a centerpiece of a very fun special-effects era.
The most difficult miniature work was with water and the look of the water in relation to a miniature ship.
It was found that the larger the model ship, the more realistic the water looked, and in Columbia's "Sink the Bismarck", the ships were anywhere from 40-60 feet in length. The water body was an indoor pool over 300 ft. in diameter, surrounded by wind machines and under the floor of the tank, large hydraulic pistons created waves.
Can you imagine what fun that was? Blowing up and sinking these huge models.....it was a dream of mine for years.
Today, a scruffy kid sits in front of a computer and creates sea battles and catastrophes that are astoundingly realistic. He uses 1's and 0's.....nothing of the physical world.
Still, the destruction of the Bismarck, and the capstone piece, the massive explosion of the H.M.S. Hood amaze and awe anyone who watches this film today.
This is a WWII film for the ages, and a centerpiece of a very fun special-effects era.
- BigBobFoonman
- 20 dic 2010
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- How long is Sink the Bismarck!?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Idiomas
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Hundir el Bismarck
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Empresa productora
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- 1.330.000 US$ (estimación)
- Duración1 hora 37 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.20 : 1
- 2.35 : 1
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Principal laguna de datos
By what name was ¡Hundid el Bismarck! (1960) officially released in India in English?
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