Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaActual trial footage, emotional recollections of trial witnesses and other key participants provide insight and contrasting perspectives of the Eichmann legacy.Actual trial footage, emotional recollections of trial witnesses and other key participants provide insight and contrasting perspectives of the Eichmann legacy.Actual trial footage, emotional recollections of trial witnesses and other key participants provide insight and contrasting perspectives of the Eichmann legacy.
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Ariel Abraham
- Self
- (filmato d'archivio)
Martin Agronsky
- Self - NBC News
- (filmato d'archivio)
Gabriel Bach
- Self - Assistant Prosecutor
- (as Gavriel Bach)
Moshe Bejski
- Self
- (filmato d'archivio)
David Ben-Gurion
- Self
- (filmato d'archivio)
Eric Bogosian
- Franz Meyer
- (voce)
- …
Jeffrey DeMunn
- Moshe Beisky
- (voce)
- (as Jeff DeMunn)
- …
Aviva Fleischmann
- Self
- (filmato d'archivio)
Pinhas Freudiger
- Self
- (filmato d'archivio)
Recensione in evidenza
This had the potential to be interesting but couldn't decide what it wanted to do.
Was it about the trial per se?
Was it about responses to the trial at the time?
Was it about responses in the fifty years since the trial?
Was it about Nazi'ism generally?
This is why I call it documentary slop. It was various old footage, loosely edited and interleaved, but with no strong opinion about anything (opinions cost money!)
About 2/3 (the actual trial footage) is interesting though, as always, one fears that the editing may have had an agenda, even if the agenda was "this is boring, that's not". The other 1/3 is utterly uninteresting main-in-the-street responses to the trial.
Very little here you won't already know if you have even the slightest awareness of the phrase "the banality of evil". And very little here in the trial machinations and details that you didn't already know.
Was it about the trial per se?
Was it about responses to the trial at the time?
Was it about responses in the fifty years since the trial?
Was it about Nazi'ism generally?
This is why I call it documentary slop. It was various old footage, loosely edited and interleaved, but with no strong opinion about anything (opinions cost money!)
About 2/3 (the actual trial footage) is interesting though, as always, one fears that the editing may have had an agenda, even if the agenda was "this is boring, that's not". The other 1/3 is utterly uninteresting main-in-the-street responses to the trial.
Very little here you won't already know if you have even the slightest awareness of the phrase "the banality of evil". And very little here in the trial machinations and details that you didn't already know.
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- 10 mar 2025
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- QuizPerhaps the most moving image in Steven Spielberg's epic film Schindler's List (1993) is the little girl in the red coat which is the only color image in the three hour black and white film. However, most people do not know that this image is based upon a true story, a story told at the trial of Adolf Eichmann. In this PBS documentary, "The Trial of Adolf Eichmann", this image loses none of its impact when the actual story is told by Assistant Prosecutor and later Supreme Court Judge Gavriel Bach in an interview which appears in the program. When asked if there was any moment in the trial that affected him more than any other, this is the moment he describes. Bach was questioning Dr. Martin Földi, a survivor of Auschwitz, about the selection process at the train station in the shadows of the famous "Arbeit Macht Frei" sign at Auschwitz. Földi described how he and a son went to the right while a daughter and his wife went to the left. His little daughter wore the red coat. When an SS officer sent the son to join the mother and daughter, Földi describes his panic. How would the boy, only twelve, find them among the thousands of people there? But then he realized the red coat would be like a beacon for the boy to join his mother and sister. He then ends his testimony with the chilling phrase, "I never saw them again''. In the program, while telling the story, thirty-five years after the incident, Judge Bach wells up with emotion. As Dr. Földi recounted the incident, Bach became frozen and unable to continue. All he could do was think about this own daughter who he had by chance just bought a red coat. He then adds that to this day he can be at the theater or a restaurant and he will feel his heart beating faster when he sees a little girl in a red coat.
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- The Eichmann Trial
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- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 57 minuti
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- 1.33 : 1
- 4:3
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By what name was The Trial of Adolf Eichmann (1997) officially released in Canada in English?
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