| Date of Review |
November 2006 |
| Manufacturer |
Tristar |
| Subject |
German The 6th Army 'Mamaev Hill' |
| Scale |
1/35 |
| Kit Number |
35024 |
| Primary Media |
61 parts in tan styrene |
| Pros |
Nice combat poses, great for complimenting
tank kits |
| Cons |
Too clean and "parade ground neat" for
Stalingrad |
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$14.50 |
Stalingrad was by far the most brutal battle fought on the Soviet
front. Both sides were chewed to ribbons in their dogged determination
to either take or hold the namesake city of the USSR. For example,
the Soviet 62nd Army under then General Chuykov (later a Marshal
of the Soviet Union) took in more than 12 full infantry divisions
plus augmentation units and attachments, but at the end of the
battle could barely muster 33,000 troops (they should have had
well over 120,000 by tabular strength.)
The centerpiece of their tenacious defense was a hill overlooking
the Volga River called the Mamayev Kurgan. More soldiers on both
sides died fighting for this hill than any other part of the city.
Today, one of the premier monuments in Russia stands here – a
540-foot high statue of Mother Russia (the "Rodina" personified)
wielding a sword.
Tristar now offers a new figure set of four German infantrymen
which is labeled for the 6th Army (von Paulus') at Stalingrad.
But having some knowledge of the actual battle and how grubby the
area really was (think of the movie "Enemy at the Gates" which
does not appear to be too far off with its presentation of how
the soldiers on both sides actually looked, with only Ed Harris'
German major appearing anything close to "parade ground" fresh)
these four are too neat and too close to perfectly dressed to look
the part.
That being said, they are nicely done and will work well in other
environments or situations. Each figure follows conventional breakdown
(two legs, torso, two arms and head plus accouterments) but they
are well animated and sculpted. Two of them are leaning up against
a berm or ditch (and designed that way) and two are running.
The two men against the berm are armed with MP40s, one of the
running men has an MG42 and the other a Kar 98K. Oddly, while the
running figures appear to be a matched set, the man with the rifle
is not carrying an ammo can or two for the machine gun.
All figures carry the same kit, but as noted it looks more parade
ground than combat solider. Each one has an M1935 helmet, bread
bag, canteen, gas mask canister, poncho and entrenching tool. Other
than the aforementioned machine gunner, each one wears appropriate
ammo pouches for his weapon.
Overall, while these figures are nicely done people who do conversions
or modify their figures will probably get more from them than anyone
wanting to do a down-and-really-dirty Stalingrad vignette.
Thanks to MRC for the review sample.
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