Alla fine del 1944, anche se stavano affrontando una sconfitta imminente, i nazisti spesero enormi risorse per uccidere o deportare oltre quattrocento venticinque mila ebrei durante la puliz... Leggi tuttoAlla fine del 1944, anche se stavano affrontando una sconfitta imminente, i nazisti spesero enormi risorse per uccidere o deportare oltre quattrocento venticinque mila ebrei durante la pulizia dell'Ungheria.Alla fine del 1944, anche se stavano affrontando una sconfitta imminente, i nazisti spesero enormi risorse per uccidere o deportare oltre quattrocento venticinque mila ebrei durante la pulizia dell'Ungheria.
- Vincitore di 1 Oscar
- 1 vittoria e 3 candidature totali
- Self - Historian and Holocaust Survivor
- (as Dr. Randolph Braham)
- Self - Holocaust Survivor
- (as Renée Firestone)
- Self - Nazi Doctor, Auschwitz
- (as Dr. Hans Münch)
- Self - US Army, Dachau
- (as Dr. Paul Parks)
- Self (walks behind Hitler and Göring)
- (filmato d'archivio)
- (partecipazione non confermata)
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Self - Views Eiffel Tower with Hitler
- (filmato d'archivio)
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Self (listens to Hitler)
- (filmato d'archivio)
- (partecipazione non confermata)
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
It took decades for the real horror of the Nazi extermination to be adequately shown to the public. We should use this film as an example of the mindset that drives current holocausts being perpetrated right now or being openly planned by international leaders. It doesn't matter who is being persecuted, the open hated and psychosis of the perpetrators is on display here, you can easily see the same aberrant thought processes in action right now in Africa and the Middle East.
If only the world could show the courage that was clearly lacking in the 1930's.
The story is movingly told from the viewpoints of a number of now elderly men and women still alive at the time of filming, all of them survivors of Auschwitz, Birkenald, Bergen-Belsen and other death camps. I refuse to let myself be emotionally fatigued by these horrific eye-witness testimonies of the atrocities carried out daily by their then German masters, no matter how often I see and hear them, all graphically illustrated by contemporary photography and verite footage which even so can only hint at the daily atrocities perpetrated on the prisoners.
We learn that the non-Jewish Hungarian public turned on their fellow citizens immediately the Germans invaded, siding with the occupying Nazis. There is also a chilling interview with an aged Auschwitz doctor who I wouldn't trust an inch as he baldly announces that he was acquitted of war crimes but who today exhibits no emotion or apparent regret for what was perpetrated in the camp, even when confronted by the sister of just one of the thousands who were killed on his watch.
The film, co-produced by Steven Spielberg, tells its horrendous story from its calm, pre-occupation beginning to its barbarous conclusion, ending up with a number of the survivors returning to the scenes of their worst nightmares, equally demonstrating their indomitable survival instinct coupled with a haunted sense of never-ending loss for their loved ones. Tellingly, none are asked their opinions about the German people although I was surprised, confirmed atheist that I am, that so many of them exonerated their God who had seemingly remotely and uncaringly presided over this ultimate example of inhumanity by his own creation.
It has always to be remembered, in addition, that this awful slaughter occurred in other countries the Germans invaded, as well as to think that, unbelievably and shamefully, there are Holocaust deniers out there who would refute what is so heartbreakingly and convincingly related here. As other recent commenters have said, they look to be in the majority here or perhaps are bringing some latter-day political agenda of their own to disrespect the honesty of this film.
9/10
The movie did an excellent job of weaving together five survivors stories. On the DVD that we got from Netflix, the music was uncomfortably loud to the point of not being able to hear what the survivors were saying. Hopefully, this is just a bum copy and in other screenings the music does not overpower the talking.
I applaud the folks who made this film and especially the survivors who were able to share such deep emotion even in front of a film crew.
Thank you.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizHans Zimmer, the composer of the score, provided the music free of charge for the Survivors Of The Shoah Visual History Foundation.
- Citazioni
[last lines]
Dr. Randolph Braham: The Holocaust has to be taught as a chapter in the long history of man's inhumanity to man. One cannot ignore the discrimination inflicted on many people because of race color or creed. One cannot ignore slavery. One cannot ignore the burning of witches. One cannot ignore the killing Christians during the Roman period. The Holocaust perhaps is the culmination of the kind of horror that can occur when man loses his integrity, his belief in the sanctity of human life.
- Colonne sonoreCzardas Princess Highlights Overture
Written by Emmerich Kálmán (as Emmerich Kalman)
(c)1957 Vox Productions Inc., New York
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Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 421.432 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 20.492 USD
- 7 feb 1999
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 421.432 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 27 minuti
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- 1.85 : 1