Petersen wanted the set to be as realistic as the U-96, and he accomplished that by utilizing photos Buccheim took during his time aboard the U-boat. The cameras were all operating at speeds between 50 and 100 frames per second. 'Das Boot' was directed by German filmmaker, Wolfgang Petersen, and it tells the story of the Germans aboard the submarine as they engaged in the Battle of the Atlantic. Further shots were gathered at Bodensee lake in Bavaria. At the correct scale, these were radio controlled to duck up and down and wave. The miniature crew members on the conning tower were modified "Barbie" (more probably Ken) dolls. Other boats had to be maneuvered around to churn up some waves along with spray from fire hoses to complete the stormy effect. The meeting of the two subs in the middle of the Atlantic lurching through large seas was actually done in mild weather at the very end of the second trip. This meant that the Director of photography Jost Vacano and his assistant Peter Maiwald had to don wetsuits, life vests and be strapped down, gulping for air between waves to get the shots using a 200mm lens. The camera shot through a hole cut into the side of the camera boat to achieve the scale height of a conning tower. She groans, splits, careens, and topples. Die 'Titan' wird an einer Stelle vermutet, an der sich viel Metall befindet, sagt der Chef der US-Kstenwache. Das Boot’s submarine U-96 is a tomb a rusting tin can that rarely has its fleshy cargo’s best interests at heart. The real waves on some days reached a height of 4.5 metres (15ft). Kstenwache wertet 'Titanic'-Unglcksstelle als 'unglaublich komplex'. The photography took place in the North Sea near the island of Helgoland, (known for reliably stormy seas), in two separate trips. 2h 29m IMDb RATING 8.4 /10 256K YOUR RATING Rate POPULARITY 2,225 197 Play trailer 1:06 4 Videos 99+ Photos Drama War A German U-boat stalks the frigid waters of the North Atlantic as its young crew experience the sheer terror and claustrophobic life of a submariner in World War II. Originally this was controlled by a diver concealed inside, but he became very seasick and subsequently the sub was towed by a boat out of shot. the TV Das Boot introduces a new submarine, U-612, captained by Klaus Hoffman (Rick Okon), the son of a WWI heroand the nemesis. The largest at 11.2 metres (37ft) in 1/6 scale was used for all the running on the surface, diving and surfacing shots. Das Boot’s land-bound storylines serve multiple functions. They are at La Rochelle near Rochefort-sur-Mer, built by the. Three type VIIC U-96 models were built for the film at diminishing scales. The submarine pens the sub sets out from, and site of the tragic air raid at the end, are real.
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