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  1. Counter-Attack: Directed by Zoltan Korda. With Paul Muni, Marguerite Chapman, Larry Parks, Harro Meller. During WW2, a Mexican stand-off ensues between a group of German soldiers and a team of Soviet fighters trapped together in the basement of a bombed-out Russian building.

    • (566)
    • Drama, War
    • Zoltan Korda
    • 1945-04-26
  2. The title Counter-Attack (1945) indicates a battle picture, and the historical context, the counter-attack by Soviet troops against Nazi invaders, one of the most significant events of World War II, leads one to expect large-scale military action.

    • Zoltan Korda, Earl Bellamy
    • Paul Muni
  3. www.rottentomatoes.com › m › counterattack-one-against-sevenCounter-Attack | Rotten Tomatoes

    1945 1h 30m War. List. During World War II, two Russians, soldier Alexei Kulkov (Paul Muni) and navigator Lisa Elenko (Marguerite Chapman), are trapped underground with a group of Germans.

    • (3)
    • Wolcott Gibbs
    • War
    • Zoltan Korda
  4. This drama centers on a Red Army officer (Paul Muni), a Russian woman (Lisa Elenko), and seven German soldiers who have been trapped in the ruined cellar of a bombed out factory in a German-controlled town. While waiting for someone to rescue them, the two Russians try to keep the Germans away.

  5. Counter-Attack is a 1945 American war film directed by Zoltan Korda and starring Paul Muni and Marguerite Chapman as two Russians trapped in a collapsed building with seven enemy German soldiers during World War II.

  6. They attack the German stronghold at a factory and the Russians win the battle until an alerted squadron of enemy planes bomb the facility trapping Kulkov and Elenko with seven German soldiers that they’d just discovered and captured.

  7. Counter-Attack is a 1945 war film starring Paul Muni and Marguerite Chapman as two Russians trapped in a collapsed building with seven enemy German soldiers during World War II. It was adapted from the Broadway play Counterattack by Janet and Philip Stevenson, which was in turn based on the play Pobyeda by Mikhail Ruderman and Ilya Vershinin.