Where Is Anne Frank
- 2021
- 1 घं 39 मि
IMDb रेटिंग
6.4/10
2 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंKitty, the imaginary girl who Anne Frank wrote to in her 1940s diary during WWII, seeks out the deceased diarist while also inspiring a wave of modern social justice for refugees.Kitty, the imaginary girl who Anne Frank wrote to in her 1940s diary during WWII, seeks out the deceased diarist while also inspiring a wave of modern social justice for refugees.Kitty, the imaginary girl who Anne Frank wrote to in her 1940s diary during WWII, seeks out the deceased diarist while also inspiring a wave of modern social justice for refugees.
- पुरस्कार
- 2 जीत और कुल 8 नामांकन
Emily Carey
- Anne Frank
- (वॉइस)
Ruby Stokes
- Kitty
- (वॉइस)
Skye Bennett
- Margot
- (वॉइस)
Nell Barlow
- Elsa Platt
- (वॉइस)
Samantha Spiro
- Edith Frank
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Mike Tehrani
- Stoned Guy
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
I almost cried as I watched this brilliant movie. What a beautiful way to show what Anne Frank and her diary "Kitty" mean for the young people of today.
I was keen to check this out, because Waltz with Bashir (2008) is one of my all-time favourite films, and I also quite liked Ari Folman's previous film, The Congress (2013). Where is Anne Frank doesn't quite work though, not even coming close to Folman's 2008 film quality-wise and also proving a bit disappointing compared to his 2013 film.
The tone is just very strange, and the storytelling feels a tad awkward, even if the premise sounds like it could work on paper. I can't imagine kids finding this to be particularly engaging, and adults are just going to feel a bit like they're being talked down to.
Aspects of the presentation are interesting- the music kind of stood out, and not in a bad way. I was mixed on the animation overall, though. I don't think it was utilised as well here as it had been in Forman's previous animated/half-animated movies.
I have to admire the film trying to tell a dark historical story in a way that's technically family-friendly, but keeping younger/older viewers actually engaged is a whole other matter. I think this is where the film falters, regardless of whether you're judging it as a family film or one that older audiences can watch and feel invested in.
This proved to be a disappointment, but at least it wasn't a total failure, and there are some things of merit here that can be somewhat appreciated.
The tone is just very strange, and the storytelling feels a tad awkward, even if the premise sounds like it could work on paper. I can't imagine kids finding this to be particularly engaging, and adults are just going to feel a bit like they're being talked down to.
Aspects of the presentation are interesting- the music kind of stood out, and not in a bad way. I was mixed on the animation overall, though. I don't think it was utilised as well here as it had been in Forman's previous animated/half-animated movies.
I have to admire the film trying to tell a dark historical story in a way that's technically family-friendly, but keeping younger/older viewers actually engaged is a whole other matter. I think this is where the film falters, regardless of whether you're judging it as a family film or one that older audiences can watch and feel invested in.
This proved to be a disappointment, but at least it wasn't a total failure, and there are some things of merit here that can be somewhat appreciated.
This movie was a Magical Realism about Anne Frank Imaginary friend named Kitty, who wakes up in the Modern Day Amsterdam. The film tells the story of Anne and Kitty in the Netherland during the Nazi Occupation and the 21st Century of the Netherland. I know about Anne Frank, and I have a Book that Anne Wrote when she was in a Safehouse during the Nazi Occupation of the Netherland. The Story of Annes Frank was tragic, she died in the Nazi's Death Camp, and I know that we should say that War is Hell. I love this movie because the film tells the story of Shoah to the Our Generation. And I think so that I will recommended this movies to watch and I gave this movies to 7/10.
Kitty, the imaginary girl who Anne Frank wrote to in her 1940s diary during WWII, seeks out the deceased diarist while also inspiring a wave of modern social justice for refugees. As Kitty embarks on a journey to find Anne, who she believes is still alive, in today's Europe . Although the young girl is impressed by the vicissitudes of the modern world, she is also surprised by the legacy that Anne has left behind.
A well-intentioned movie but with a silly plot about Anne Frank's friend Kitty who steals Anne's diary in order to achieve a just cause so that immigrants from the Netherlands are not deported to their home countries. The film follows the journey of Kitty, the imaginary friend to whom Anne Frank dedicated her diary. The animation style of the film is very delicate , but the interaction established between the Holocaust and the current situation of the emigrants seems somewhat forced although, of course, necessary . The protagonists are a fiery teenager, Kitty , who wakes up in the near future in Anne Frank's house in Amsterdam , as the young girl is shocked by the modern world, she also comes across Anne's legacy and Anne Frank herself.
While hesitating for a time to accept the challenge posed to him by the Anne Frank Foundation, Folman has made several outstanding artistic decisions to emerge well from a journey of more than a decade. Folman was born in Haifa, Israel. He is a writer and director, known for The Congress (2013), Walz with Bashir (2008) and Clara Hakedosha (1996).
There're several biographic remarks about Anne Frank :nnelies Marie Frank was born on June 12, 1929 in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. Her parents were Otto and Edith Frank. For the first five years of her life, Anne lived with her parents and Margot, her older sister, in an apartment on the outskirts of Frankfurt. After the Nazis came to power in 1933, Otto Frank fled to Amsterdam, in the Netherlands, where he had business contacts. The rest of the Frank family soon followed, Anne being the last to arrive in February 1934 because she had stayed with her grandparents in Aachen. The fate of the Franks and other Amsterdam Jews was marked by the German occupation of the city. City, which began in May 1940. In early 1942, the Germans began preparations to deport Jews from the Netherlands to killing centers in the east. At that time, they demanded that all Dutch Jews be concentrated in Amsterdam. They also decided to intern all non-Dutch Jews in the Westerbork transit camp. From Westerbork, German officials deported Jews to the killing centers at Auschwitz-Birkenau and Sobibor in German-occupied Poland. The first deportation transport left Westerbork on July 15, 1942, bound for Auschwitz-Birkenau. These deportations and the intensification of anti-Semitic measures alarmed many Jews in the Netherlands, among whom were the Franks. Anne and her family decided to go into hiding in the first 15 days of July 1942. They were later joined by four other Jews: Hermann, Auguste and Peter van Pels, as well as Fritz Pfeffer. For two years, they all lived in a secret apartment at 263 Prinsengracht. The apartment was behind the commercial offices where Otto Frank had worked as a company manager. In her diary, Ana refers to the hideout as the "secret annex". Johannes Kleiman, Victor Kugler, Johan Voskuijl, Bep Voskuijl, Jan Gies and Miep Gies, who were friends and colleagues of Otto Frank, helped set up the hideout and smuggled food and clothing to the Franks, risking their own lives. During the time they were in hiding, Ana kept a journal where she wrote about her fears, hopes, and experiences. Then there takes place Arrest and deportation. On August 4, 1944, the German SS and police discovered the hideout. Authorities had long been believed to have acted on a tip from an anonymous Dutchman, but a more recent theory found that the Germans discovered the hideout by chance while investigating reports of illegal work being done in the house and they committed fraud with the ration coupons.
A well-intentioned movie but with a silly plot about Anne Frank's friend Kitty who steals Anne's diary in order to achieve a just cause so that immigrants from the Netherlands are not deported to their home countries. The film follows the journey of Kitty, the imaginary friend to whom Anne Frank dedicated her diary. The animation style of the film is very delicate , but the interaction established between the Holocaust and the current situation of the emigrants seems somewhat forced although, of course, necessary . The protagonists are a fiery teenager, Kitty , who wakes up in the near future in Anne Frank's house in Amsterdam , as the young girl is shocked by the modern world, she also comes across Anne's legacy and Anne Frank herself.
While hesitating for a time to accept the challenge posed to him by the Anne Frank Foundation, Folman has made several outstanding artistic decisions to emerge well from a journey of more than a decade. Folman was born in Haifa, Israel. He is a writer and director, known for The Congress (2013), Walz with Bashir (2008) and Clara Hakedosha (1996).
There're several biographic remarks about Anne Frank :nnelies Marie Frank was born on June 12, 1929 in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. Her parents were Otto and Edith Frank. For the first five years of her life, Anne lived with her parents and Margot, her older sister, in an apartment on the outskirts of Frankfurt. After the Nazis came to power in 1933, Otto Frank fled to Amsterdam, in the Netherlands, where he had business contacts. The rest of the Frank family soon followed, Anne being the last to arrive in February 1934 because she had stayed with her grandparents in Aachen. The fate of the Franks and other Amsterdam Jews was marked by the German occupation of the city. City, which began in May 1940. In early 1942, the Germans began preparations to deport Jews from the Netherlands to killing centers in the east. At that time, they demanded that all Dutch Jews be concentrated in Amsterdam. They also decided to intern all non-Dutch Jews in the Westerbork transit camp. From Westerbork, German officials deported Jews to the killing centers at Auschwitz-Birkenau and Sobibor in German-occupied Poland. The first deportation transport left Westerbork on July 15, 1942, bound for Auschwitz-Birkenau. These deportations and the intensification of anti-Semitic measures alarmed many Jews in the Netherlands, among whom were the Franks. Anne and her family decided to go into hiding in the first 15 days of July 1942. They were later joined by four other Jews: Hermann, Auguste and Peter van Pels, as well as Fritz Pfeffer. For two years, they all lived in a secret apartment at 263 Prinsengracht. The apartment was behind the commercial offices where Otto Frank had worked as a company manager. In her diary, Ana refers to the hideout as the "secret annex". Johannes Kleiman, Victor Kugler, Johan Voskuijl, Bep Voskuijl, Jan Gies and Miep Gies, who were friends and colleagues of Otto Frank, helped set up the hideout and smuggled food and clothing to the Franks, risking their own lives. During the time they were in hiding, Ana kept a journal where she wrote about her fears, hopes, and experiences. Then there takes place Arrest and deportation. On August 4, 1944, the German SS and police discovered the hideout. Authorities had long been believed to have acted on a tip from an anonymous Dutchman, but a more recent theory found that the Germans discovered the hideout by chance while investigating reports of illegal work being done in the house and they committed fraud with the ration coupons.
"Where is Anne Frank"
"Where is Anne Frank" begins with a miracle, Kitty (Ruby Stokes), the imaginary friend to whom Anne Frank (Emily Carey) writes in her famous Diary, comes to life in present-day Amsterdam. Unaware that 75 years have gone by, Kitty is convinced that if she's alive, then Anne must be alive too. It's the beginning of an adventurous journey. It's the story of Kitty's quest across contemporary Europe searching for her beloved friend. Armed with the precious Diary and with help from her friend Peter (Sebastian Croft), who runs a secret shelter for undocumented refugees, Kitty follows Anne's traces from the Annex to her tragic end in the 'Holocaust'. Disoriented by our broken world and the injustices that child refugees endure, Kitty wants to replace Anne's cause. Through her honesty, she presents a message of hope and generosity addressed to future generations.
Kitty is the leading role and the protagonist of the movie. What happened to Anne during the end of the war. How did she die? In doing so, she also discovers the current situation in Europe, with refugees from all over the world, running away from war zones. Another two conditions are to connect past and present time and to follow the last 7 dreadful months of Anne Frank's life. Kitty has always been there. But just in the Diary and not as an actual person. Anne Frank has left us many descriptions of Kitty, who she's, what she looks like, what kind of personality she's. And of course, there's her dialogue with Kitty. The movie makes Kitty into an alter ego of Anne. She's not under the control of parents who set her limits, as Anne was. For Kitty, there are no fellow inhabitants in her hideout criticising her. She's therefore free to do whatever Anne had wanted to do in her own imagination. In the movie Kitty becomes an activist for refugees in the present day. She's a part of new, political youth movements about climate and human rights. She's indeed a child of our times.
The character of Kitty started out as Anne's imaginary friend, basically. But in the movie she's building a bridge between the past and the present. As she ventures out into the world, she meets young people such as herself who are in danger, maybe because they've to run away from war zones. That reminds Kitty of Anne and the fact that Anne did not have an opportunity to run away during her relatively short time in hiding. This experience turns Kitty into an activist. At the same time, she realises her powers to promote a movement for children's rights. And these powers grow from her being a visitor in our world. Alongside Kitty, audiences confront the 'Holocaust'. The character of Kitty is not meant to be an extension or a rebirth of Anne's personality after her death. As Kitty leaves the house and ventures forth into the world, she has her own options. The Diary casts the relationship between Anne and her sister Margot (Skye Bennett), her mother Edith (Samantha Spiro) and Albert Dussel (Andrew Woodall) in a negative way in some respects. The one scene where the Frank family arrives at the Auschwitz concentration camp is the hardest task in the whole movie.
Shortly after Otto Frank (Michael Maloney) published the Diary of his daughter Anne Frank in 1947, he decides to have it adapted for stage. The success of the Broadway show 'The Diary Of A Young Girl' (1956) followed by the Oscar winning movie by George Stevens is the beginning of the success of the Diary to ensure that all royalties are used to support charitable and educational work, Otto Frank established the 'Anne Frank Fonds' in Basel in 1963, which he appoints his universal heir. Against this background the foundation initiated the animation movie in which Anne Frank's imaginary friend comes to life. The movie represents an introduction to lessons of history, the 'Holocaust', discrimination and anti-Semitism.
"Where is Anne Frank" is a 'Holocaust' movie. It's a new dimension to tell the 'Holocaust' story. But our minds are incapable of creating a visual connection to these stories and cannot fully grasp what happened. Sure, animation lets you reinvent the world. But the movie decides at the outset to break with a certain pattern of the genre. Most war movies show the present in colour and the past as monochrome. "Anne Frank" goes the opposite way. Therefore, in the movie present-day Amsterdam is depicte in monochrome colours, the city is in wintertime and has been completely drained of colour. On the other hand, the past is seen through the eyes of Anne, it's very lively, colourful and rich in tones. If you has to tell such a harsh story, you can work either with humour or a lot of emotions. But if you exaggerate and force the audience to delve into tired clichés of agony and woe, you risk losing your viewers. You must maintain an even-handedness while showing human aspects of the characters and avoid overplaying emotions and turning to gimmicks. You've to present a new, entirely different approach to the Diary, which is fairly well known among young audiences. Scenes unfolding in the past are telling the story of the Diary and even the future beyond the 'Holocaust' has been anticipated in the Diary to a certain extent. But the movie tells the story in a different way, namely not as a monologue by Anne, but as a dialogue between the girls. For us, the imaginary friend has become real and they're discussing among themselves what Anne has written down as her monologue.
It's not only about the 'Holocaust', which must of course never be forgotten, but also about the lessons that we can take from it for our own life. So it's not only a matter of looking back at what happened then, but also to see what's essential about the Diary and it's message for the new generation. The educational programme looks at the 'Holocaust', Jews, anti-Semitism, but also at children's rights, migration and refugees today. The movie deals with these topics at a time when this is urgently needed again. But this story is missing the horrible fates of those who starved in the ghettoes or who were deported in trains towards the East into the 'Final Solution'. When it comes to the past, these elements are dramatic, they originate from, or are based on the original text in the Diary. What's shown in the movie is what arises from reading the text and from what Anne Frank wrote about her dreams, emotions and wishes. Although the par about the 'Holocaust' is not in the Diary. Reading the Diary without putting it into the context of the present is meaningless as we need to learn the lessons of the past to make a difference. Children are still running away from war zones and their lives are in danger, minorities, refugees and individuals are still discriminated against.
Written by Gregory Mann.
"Where is Anne Frank" begins with a miracle, Kitty (Ruby Stokes), the imaginary friend to whom Anne Frank (Emily Carey) writes in her famous Diary, comes to life in present-day Amsterdam. Unaware that 75 years have gone by, Kitty is convinced that if she's alive, then Anne must be alive too. It's the beginning of an adventurous journey. It's the story of Kitty's quest across contemporary Europe searching for her beloved friend. Armed with the precious Diary and with help from her friend Peter (Sebastian Croft), who runs a secret shelter for undocumented refugees, Kitty follows Anne's traces from the Annex to her tragic end in the 'Holocaust'. Disoriented by our broken world and the injustices that child refugees endure, Kitty wants to replace Anne's cause. Through her honesty, she presents a message of hope and generosity addressed to future generations.
Kitty is the leading role and the protagonist of the movie. What happened to Anne during the end of the war. How did she die? In doing so, she also discovers the current situation in Europe, with refugees from all over the world, running away from war zones. Another two conditions are to connect past and present time and to follow the last 7 dreadful months of Anne Frank's life. Kitty has always been there. But just in the Diary and not as an actual person. Anne Frank has left us many descriptions of Kitty, who she's, what she looks like, what kind of personality she's. And of course, there's her dialogue with Kitty. The movie makes Kitty into an alter ego of Anne. She's not under the control of parents who set her limits, as Anne was. For Kitty, there are no fellow inhabitants in her hideout criticising her. She's therefore free to do whatever Anne had wanted to do in her own imagination. In the movie Kitty becomes an activist for refugees in the present day. She's a part of new, political youth movements about climate and human rights. She's indeed a child of our times.
The character of Kitty started out as Anne's imaginary friend, basically. But in the movie she's building a bridge between the past and the present. As she ventures out into the world, she meets young people such as herself who are in danger, maybe because they've to run away from war zones. That reminds Kitty of Anne and the fact that Anne did not have an opportunity to run away during her relatively short time in hiding. This experience turns Kitty into an activist. At the same time, she realises her powers to promote a movement for children's rights. And these powers grow from her being a visitor in our world. Alongside Kitty, audiences confront the 'Holocaust'. The character of Kitty is not meant to be an extension or a rebirth of Anne's personality after her death. As Kitty leaves the house and ventures forth into the world, she has her own options. The Diary casts the relationship between Anne and her sister Margot (Skye Bennett), her mother Edith (Samantha Spiro) and Albert Dussel (Andrew Woodall) in a negative way in some respects. The one scene where the Frank family arrives at the Auschwitz concentration camp is the hardest task in the whole movie.
Shortly after Otto Frank (Michael Maloney) published the Diary of his daughter Anne Frank in 1947, he decides to have it adapted for stage. The success of the Broadway show 'The Diary Of A Young Girl' (1956) followed by the Oscar winning movie by George Stevens is the beginning of the success of the Diary to ensure that all royalties are used to support charitable and educational work, Otto Frank established the 'Anne Frank Fonds' in Basel in 1963, which he appoints his universal heir. Against this background the foundation initiated the animation movie in which Anne Frank's imaginary friend comes to life. The movie represents an introduction to lessons of history, the 'Holocaust', discrimination and anti-Semitism.
"Where is Anne Frank" is a 'Holocaust' movie. It's a new dimension to tell the 'Holocaust' story. But our minds are incapable of creating a visual connection to these stories and cannot fully grasp what happened. Sure, animation lets you reinvent the world. But the movie decides at the outset to break with a certain pattern of the genre. Most war movies show the present in colour and the past as monochrome. "Anne Frank" goes the opposite way. Therefore, in the movie present-day Amsterdam is depicte in monochrome colours, the city is in wintertime and has been completely drained of colour. On the other hand, the past is seen through the eyes of Anne, it's very lively, colourful and rich in tones. If you has to tell such a harsh story, you can work either with humour or a lot of emotions. But if you exaggerate and force the audience to delve into tired clichés of agony and woe, you risk losing your viewers. You must maintain an even-handedness while showing human aspects of the characters and avoid overplaying emotions and turning to gimmicks. You've to present a new, entirely different approach to the Diary, which is fairly well known among young audiences. Scenes unfolding in the past are telling the story of the Diary and even the future beyond the 'Holocaust' has been anticipated in the Diary to a certain extent. But the movie tells the story in a different way, namely not as a monologue by Anne, but as a dialogue between the girls. For us, the imaginary friend has become real and they're discussing among themselves what Anne has written down as her monologue.
It's not only about the 'Holocaust', which must of course never be forgotten, but also about the lessons that we can take from it for our own life. So it's not only a matter of looking back at what happened then, but also to see what's essential about the Diary and it's message for the new generation. The educational programme looks at the 'Holocaust', Jews, anti-Semitism, but also at children's rights, migration and refugees today. The movie deals with these topics at a time when this is urgently needed again. But this story is missing the horrible fates of those who starved in the ghettoes or who were deported in trains towards the East into the 'Final Solution'. When it comes to the past, these elements are dramatic, they originate from, or are based on the original text in the Diary. What's shown in the movie is what arises from reading the text and from what Anne Frank wrote about her dreams, emotions and wishes. Although the par about the 'Holocaust' is not in the Diary. Reading the Diary without putting it into the context of the present is meaningless as we need to learn the lessons of the past to make a difference. Children are still running away from war zones and their lives are in danger, minorities, refugees and individuals are still discriminated against.
Written by Gregory Mann.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाThe first movie to be supported by The Anne Frank Fonds Basel, granting director Ari Folman privileged access to Anne Frank's diary, various texts and family archives.
- भाव
Anne Frank: I will write my diary to this girl of mystery and her name will be Kitty.
- कनेक्शनFeatured in AniMat's Crazy Cartoon Cast: The League of D.W. (2021)
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
- How long is Where Is Anne Frank?Alexa द्वारा संचालित
विवरण
- रिलीज़ की तारीख़
- कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
- आधिकारिक साइटें
- भाषाएं
- इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
- Français
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- IMDbPro पर और कंपनी क्रेडिट देखें
बॉक्स ऑफ़िस
- बजट
- €1,75,00,000(अनुमानित)
- दुनिया भर में सकल
- $7,56,488
- चलने की अवधि1 घंटा 39 मिनट
- रंग
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 1.85 : 1
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