Das ehemalige Fotomodell Elizabeth 'Lee' Miller geht im II. Weltkrieg an die Front und dokumentiert zusammen mit David E. Scherman über Monate die Schrecken des Krieges und die Befreiung der... Alles lesenDas ehemalige Fotomodell Elizabeth 'Lee' Miller geht im II. Weltkrieg an die Front und dokumentiert zusammen mit David E. Scherman über Monate die Schrecken des Krieges und die Befreiung der KZ Buchenwald und Dachau mit dem Fotoapparat.Das ehemalige Fotomodell Elizabeth 'Lee' Miller geht im II. Weltkrieg an die Front und dokumentiert zusammen mit David E. Scherman über Monate die Schrecken des Krieges und die Befreiung der KZ Buchenwald und Dachau mit dem Fotoapparat.
- Nominiert für 1 BAFTA Award
- 3 Gewinne & 17 Nominierungen insgesamt
Zusammenfassung
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This biopic about Lee Miller is not only a powerful look at her incredible life but also a strong reminder of the horrors of war. As both a groundbreaking photographer and war correspondent, the film captures the devastating things she witnessed and the emotional toll they took on her.
The storytelling is gripping and moving, offering a deep look into resilience, art, and humanity in the face of such atrocities. I highly recommend checking it out when it comes out in Australia later this month - it's a film that will stay with you.
Oscar winner Kate Winslet stars as Lee Miller, and her fierce and committed performance validates what a passion project this was for her, and just how hard she worked to bring the project to fruition. Lee Miller was a well-known fashion model, and we see her hanging out with her band of artistic friends in pre-war France. It's here where she first meets Roland Penrose (Alexander Skarsgard), and their initial intellectual bantering leads right to the bedroom. This after we hear Ms. Miller proclaim that she had ever only been good at drinking, having sex, and taking pictures. She speaks this line in 1977 while being interviewed (by Josh O'Connor, CHALLENGERS, 2024) about her life. It's this interview that provides some structure to the film, while confirming that drinking and smoking were hobbies until the end.
It's really Lee's photographs that guide us through each phase. She and Roland relocate to London during the war, and soon enough she's taking pictures under the guidance of British Vogue editor Audrey Withers (Andrea Riseborough). Continually having to stand up for herself after being rebuked for being a woman doing a man's job, Lee partners with (and ultimately befriends) Life magazine photographer David E Scherman (a surprisingly effective Andy Samberg). Their work documenting history becomes historic in itself. After hearing about the "missing", they were the first journalists to document Dachau concentration camp and the tragic prisoner trains.
Although British Vogue refused to publish the photographs as being too "disturbing", the U. S. magazine did publish, creating awareness of the atrocities. The segment that leads to the infamous photo of Lee bathing in Hitler's tubs is handled expertly. If there is a flaw in the film, it's that we never really get to know Lee's friends, so as she re-connects with Solange (Oscar winner Marion Cotillard), their meeting doesn't hit as hard as it should. Still, the cinematography from Pawel Edelman and the accomplished performance by Kate Winslet, do justice to the stunning (actual) photographs shown. There is a dramatized twist near the film's end that pays homage to Lee and her story. An early comment about Hitler is all too relevant today, and the battle scenes and photographs reinforce what courage Lee Miller exhibited.
Opens in theaters on September 27, 2024.
Lee has all the period clothing and historical accuracy which is no small feat, while showing the sheer determination it took to achieve access to the final Nazi front of WW2. People back home in the US didn't believe exactly the horrors and certainly not the numbers of the Holocaust. It was the undeniable courageous journey by Lee which brought back the unmistakeable proof and witness of an evil place in history
Knowing that one can't unsee certain such things in person gives one empathy for the cost of doing photo journalism. Many get martyred while doing their work when jailed or taken hostage in authoritarian regimes. But in this case, to have survived seems as permanently affecting a way to finish such an important task.
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- WissenswertesLee Miller was one of just four female photographers accredited as official war correspondents with the US armed forces.
- PatzerArinze Kene who plays Major Jonesy is an African American in charge of white troops in 1944. African American soldiers did not see combat until later that year and African American officers would not have been in charge of white troops until after the desegregation of the armed forces in 1948.
- Zitate
Lee Miller: [Handing a knife to a girl she has just saved from rape] Next time, cut it off.
- Crazy CreditsThe closing credits have some "what happened to" explanations ; and some of Lee's original photos, often alongside the ones which were recreated for the film.
- VerbindungenFeatured in The 7PM Project: Folge vom 21. Oktober 2024 (2024)
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Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 2.005.488 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 713.255 $
- 29. Sept. 2024
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 24.612.473 $
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 57 Min.(117 min)
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1