I ricercatori scoprono film della seconda guerra mondiale che si rivela essere un documentario perduto girato da Alfred Hitchcock e Sidney Bernstein nel 1945 sui campi di concentramento tede... Leggi tuttoI ricercatori scoprono film della seconda guerra mondiale che si rivela essere un documentario perduto girato da Alfred Hitchcock e Sidney Bernstein nel 1945 sui campi di concentramento tedeschi.I ricercatori scoprono film della seconda guerra mondiale che si rivela essere un documentario perduto girato da Alfred Hitchcock e Sidney Bernstein nel 1945 sui campi di concentramento tedeschi.
- Premi
- 8 vittorie e 14 candidature totali
- Self - Royal Artillery
- (as Maj. Leonard Berney)
- Self - Commandant, Bergen-Belsen Concentration Camp
- (filmato d'archivio)
- Self - Army Cameraman, 1981
- (filmato d'archivio)
- (as Sgt. Mike Lewis)
- Self - British Army Photographer
- (audio di repertorio)
- (as William Lawrie)
- Self
- (audio di repertorio)
- Self - Imperial War Museums
- (as Dr. Toby Haggith)
- Self - British Army Gunner
- (filmato d'archivio)
- Self - Soviet Cameraman, 1986
- (filmato d'archivio)
- (as Alexander Voronstov)
Recensioni in evidenza
The dichotomy of war is depicted here. In Bergen-Belsen we see life struggling to be what life is and just feet away from piles of death as the corps were strewn. How can these two depictions of life occur so physically close? Only in the worst of war can such atrocities be present, if diversely repugnant. See this film and only trust your moral center as everything must be judged by inherent good.
The old adage that we are doomed to repeat history unless we learn from it comes to heart. Right now we have ISIS, a modern day Nazi style faction. Can we sit idly by and let evil fester. This film makes it clear that the cost will only exponentially multiply if good men sit by and do nothing. See this, weep for those lost at the hands of evil in the past, and renew your resolve that we must stand for good at this later day time where evil once more rears a powerful head.
And yet after a while I felt it was all beginning to be a little too much and I thought the film was probably going around in a circle and did not really have a lot more to say other than just showing detail over detail of the horror. Not that there is anything to say about the carnage that took place in those places, but somehow I felt this was probably a 40/50 minutes or so film stretched to 1 hour and 15 minutes. Yes the footage found is an incredible discovery and a terrifying testimony of a past that shouldn't be forgotten, but other than that, the film has very very little else to say. I also felt some of the use of the interviewees was a bit heavy-handed: cut to people staring into the void, or the use of pointless bit of dialogue just for the sake of seeing this people breaking down into tears half way through the phrase... There wasn't really any need for that. The original footage was heartbreaking enough without having to resort to people crying to make us the audience feel sad about it... or to dark ominous music. But that's just a question of taste. It's hard to review a documentary like this. Give it a small rating and you can be accused of being insensitive. But that's when you should really make a distinction between the subject matter and the material being shown and the actual craft of the documentary. The later is rather plodding, uneven, and as I said before a bit heavy-handed, but since the subject matter is so powerful, on balance 7 out 10 is perfectly justifiable.
In high school, I saw a French documentary that showed me, for the first time, images I had never even imagined. Horror I could not believe. I remember my classmates getting up at the end of the film and walking out of the room seemingly unfazed. I couldn't move.
Night Will Fall should be seen in every classroom on earth at least once. You cannot be too young or too old to understand the immense nature of mass insanity and those who stand idly by.
I will never forget and, in fact, am galvanized in my belief that we are too quick to assume evil will not touch us.
An absolute must see film. You will want to discuss this in depth with children before you let them watch and after.
NEVER AGAIN.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizOliver Keers' documentary research debut.
- Citazioni
Narrator for German Concentration Camps Factual Survey: Unless the world learns the lesson these pictures teach, night will fall... but by God's grace, we who live will learn.
- ConnessioniFeatures Die Todesmühlen (1945)
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 15min(75 min)
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.78 : 1