The Hollywood Reporter by Tim Goodman
Ultimately, Das Boot looks to be a wonderful find for fans of high-quality international television series with real ambition.
Critic Rating
(read reviews)User Rating
Creators
Johannes W. Betz,
Tony Saint
Cast
Franz Dinda,
Tom Wlaschiha,
Pierre Kiwitt
Genre
Drama,
War & Politics
In the port of La Rochelle, the French resistance is growing. At the same time, German U boat 612 is on a crucial reconnaissance mission, where tensions rise. Simone threatens to betray them, as her loyalty to Germany is tested by a forbidden resistance romance.
The Hollywood Reporter by Tim Goodman
Ultimately, Das Boot looks to be a wonderful find for fans of high-quality international television series with real ambition.
Wall Street Journal by Dorothy Rabinowitz
A spectacularly ambitious enterprise of unfailing power, rich in all the ways that matter in drama, in writing.
The Guardian by Rebecca Nicholson
There have been plenty of films and series that purport to show the grim reality of war, not least Das Boot’s forebears. This series, coy as it may be about its status as a reboot, is an extremely capable addition to the canon.
The Times by Carol Midgley
It sustained the pace right from the traumatic opening scene when a U-boat was destroyed, the water filling the submarine and one man choosing to shoot himself rather than await a slow drowning. Grim but gripping.
The A.V. Club by Noel Murray
Unlike the 1981 Das Boot, the TV version only spends about a third of any given episode following the crew of a submarine. And whenever it gets out of the boat, it doesn’t really feel much like Das Boot.
The New York Times by Mike Hale
On the evidence of this handsomely produced, surprisingly grisly and solemnly wacko show, though, the main benefit of opening up the story is gaining access to a whole new set of World War II clichés.
The Telegraph by Jasper Rees
The USP of Das Boot 2.0 is that the underwater drama has to budge up to make room for landlubberly intrigue involving the resistance. On the plus side there’s Vicky Krieps, who was so ineffable in the film Phantom Thread, as Simone Strasser, a wartime translator from Alsace caught on the horns of a dilemma. ... Somehow it’s odd that she should be the best thing in a testosteroney drama about blowing up convoys.
The Daily Beast by Nick Schager
From its window-dressing address of Nazis’ “final solution” attitudes toward Jews, to its dutiful recreation of Petersen’s submarine set pieces—in which alarms sound for each incoming attack, the crew goes quiet as it’s stalked by enemy destroyers, and rapidly escalating sonar beeps presage imminent danger—Das Boot is a handsome endeavor that’s never urgent or unique. Or, consequently, necessary.
Slant Magazine by Pat Brown
The sense of cheapness and naked commercialism that pervades the series makes its explicit depiction of disturbing violence—a death by firing squad, the gang rape of a Jewish woman by German sailors—feel unearned and, particularly in the latter case, completely irresponsible.
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