April 9th

2015
April 9th
6.6| 1h33m| en| More Info
Released: 12 March 2015 Released
Producted By: Det Danske Filminstitut
Country: Denmark
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

In the early morning of April 9, 1940, the Danish army is alerted: the Germans have crossed the border.

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Reviews

Aleksey Chevtchenko-Larsen Great movie. It has a slow-medium tempo, which is great (where many Hollywood movies go so fast that the eyes hurt), it is very historically correct (the poor equipment and the constant disorientation of the danish soldiers) and it has some amazing details (for example the bike tire changing and the 40 bullets). I love this movie and i really recommend it. With the resources of "Nordisk Film København", this movie is a masterpiece. 10/10 !
Fantomads This movie gives a very honest account of the situation in the morning hours of the 9th of April 1940. The Danish soldiers did their duty despite being in a hopeless situation abandoned by their generals and politicians. It's a movie made by a Dane for the Danish audience and it captures the way Danish society and the Danish Army was at that time. I loved it! It's a small piece of Danish history coming to life. Just a note on some of the other reviews in here. Don't try putting Russian politics into this movie. There is no glorification of any Danish effort during the war here. And it is not looked upon as such in Denmark. Focus on good movies - not the old er new conflicts between East and West. This is not a propaganda movie in any way - maybe you seeing it that way tells more about your view on the world than on the essence of this small masterpiece of Danish filmmaking.
Tom Dooley April 9th was the day the Wehrmacht rolled across the land border and invaded Denmark. The Danish army was only lightly armed, small in number and completely unprepared. They were mobilised but did not want to deploy in defensive positions in case the Germans saw that as a provocation – such was the politics of the day.The story is told through the experiences of a bicycle company led by Second Lieutenant Sand (Pilou Asbæk of 'A Hijacking') they decide to follow their orders and try to do the impossible of holding back the strongest army in Europe.Now this is not an epic but they have done a rather good job with most of the period detail and the acting is all really good. There was quite a bit of detail that made this memorable, but there is also a lot of doing things of a more mundane nature – like changing bike tyres etc. That said everything is integral to the story. The action when it comes is also very well done and it has the air of authenticity; if you are a WW II fan then this is one you will not be disappointed in seeing – recommended.
silviuaganghel This is one of the best war movies I have ever seen. The film follows a small group of Danish soldiers thrown unexpectedly into the meat grinder to try and slow the German advance. The movie never falls for exaggerated heroism, nor for the ubiquitous pacifism one finds in most war movies. With the patience of a historian it purports to present the experiences of a small number of Danish soldiers in the early hours of April the 9th, 1940. The film is a thorough anatomy of what happens with soldiers under fire. It focuses on the soldier's training, equipment, leadership and so on. Many aspects of world war two, which we know from memoirs or journals, are present in the movie, even the adverse psychological effect of seeing huge numbers of enemy planes. Other reviewers address the pitiful state of the Danish army in this movie. This is just wrong. The movie presents an army which is well trained, well equipped, well led, well motivated and which knew the terrain of battle extremely well. They were however heavily outnumbered and out-gunned. A great war movie.