A "DVDRip" indicates the video has been encoded from an original retail DVD. While quality varies by the ripper, you can generally expect:
Errol Flynn, Ann Sheridan, Walter Huston, and Ruth Gordon.
This film is often praised for its "unflinching" nature compared to other 1940s propaganda. It begins at the end of the story—with a German patrol finding a village full of corpses—and uses a flashback to explain how the tension reached a breaking point.
Because the film features several scenes with German soldiers and nuanced dialogue regarding the resistance's plans, subtitles are often sought for clarity. Common subtitle formats for this release include:
1.37:1 (The original Academy Ratio, appearing as a "square" image with black bars on the sides of modern widescreen TVs).