Holocaust survivors share their story of fleeing to the United States, joining the US Army, training in Military Intelligence, and returning to Europe to end Nazism by using their linguistic... Read allHolocaust survivors share their story of fleeing to the United States, joining the US Army, training in Military Intelligence, and returning to Europe to end Nazism by using their linguistic abilities.Holocaust survivors share their story of fleeing to the United States, joining the US Army, training in Military Intelligence, and returning to Europe to end Nazism by using their linguistic abilities.
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Featured reviews
Largely they retell stories from the book. But 20% of stories are completely new, which surprised me. All the stories are great. And the doc is just a fun watch even though it's a shame they don't use more WW2 footage or show maps. Largely they film current locations and the interview subjects. It obviously could have been stronger if it focused on single battles one at a time and what info was used when. But I'm shocked about how few ratings this doc has online and how overlooked it is. Come on people, this is an extremely important part of WW2. Jews fighting Nazis in France, Holland, Germany. While never firing a shot. Of course the doc is just a short intro. It will leave you lacking crucial info. But they basically mention all the big events. For example, in the book a Jew says he found a girlfriend in Paris and therefore wanted to stay. Hence he tanked his interview for a super cozy and important job in London. Yet they found out they could use him in Germany and sent him close to the battle lines meaning that he went to hell for lying. In the doc he of course just says he was sent to Germany never explaining the background story that's likely the most cowardly story in the book as they get to tell their own stories. So the doc misses a lot of these deeper points. But even the book is surely lacking on a lot of details as they wouldn't exactly mention war crimes or great cowardice. It's a great doc to go along with the book. But yeah, when a TV show is made I hope they focus on battles and interviews. For war nerds how they conducted interviews and how they gained and used info is the most interesting part and that part is largely unexplained.
While occasionally very sad and moving, more than most WW II documentaries there is a big dose of ironic Jewish humor in these men, as well as a very positive life force.
Simple in its construction -- mostly talking heads intercut with photos and newsreel footage -- it manages to capture the awful insanity of war and the power of refusing to give up a sense of humor at the same time.
A rare and powerful combination.
While there is some narration, mostly the movie consists of just letting the men talk--giving their experiences and background, recounting little stories and reminiscing about their work. I actually liked this, as their lives were interesting enough and needed little embellishment other than some stock clips, photos and incidental music. I am very thankful the film was made, as these men are now quite elderly--and it's a chapter of the war seldom mentioned. It reminds me of a man who had flown in a B-17 during the war who volunteered at the Wright-Patterson Air Museum--just to answer questions and but sure that younger generations do not forget--and we are blessed to hear their stories and sacrifices.
All of the Ritchie Boys interviewed for this film were Jews. Each had a personal stake in the war. And each had the personal satisfaction of interrogating enemy soldiers in their own language and extracting information through techniques learned at Camp Ritchie, MD, which contributed important, often crucial intelligence about the actions and plans of the foe.
The interviews were conducted roughly 60 years after the fact, and the reliability of memories may be questionable. Film clips, many documenting events not quite related to the narrative, comprise the rest of the film. Missing entirely is any real overview of the Camp Ritchie enterprise. Nevertheless, the individuals interviewed have compelling personal stories to tell -- both why and how they came to the U.S. and what they did during the war.
It's a fascinating group of people in or approaching their 80's: professors, an American diplomat, a distinguished psychologist, an artist, a successful businessman, reliving their experiences for the camera, acknowledging both the pain of separation from their childhood homes and their satisfaction at having given something extremely useful back to the country which had taken them in. Unlikely soldiers to be sure but youngsters with precious knowledge that the United States put to effective use. One would have liked to know more about how it came to be organized and what happened to all the other Ritchie Boys who weren't "available" to be interviewed because they died on the field of battle.
This movie was sobering in some of the vivid descriptions of combat and other realities of war, just as much as it made you realize that there are some wars that cannot be avoided if we wish to maintain civilization. More wars like that will come.
It was also great fun to see so many of these old guys enjoying life and having kept sharp mentally after all these years and all those experiences.
Did you know
- TriviaChristian Bauer was only able to fund this movie after making Missing Allen - Wo ist Allen Ross? (2001).
- Quotes
[first lines]
title cards: Between 1933 and 1939, countless Germans, Austrians, and Czechoslovakians flee their home countries. For them, a visa to the United States is the most valuable document in the world.
Guy Stern: I emigrated to America in October 1939. Germany permitted people like myself to leave, provided you didn't have very much. We arrived in New York with $3 - my mother had $3 and I had $3. America was a fantasy at that point, which turned out to be a reality.
Guy Stern: [lecturing] Who were the first ones who did any stock-taking of what was emerging unique in literary history abroad? Because, if you look at the tradition of literature...
Guy Stern: I first tried to enlist in 1942 in the Intelligence Service of the Navy. And they told me that they only would take native-born Americans. A couple of months later I was inducted into the US Army, and after my basic training, as Camp Barkley, Texas, I was transferred to the US Military Intelligence Training Center, at Camp Ritchie, Maryland.
Guy Stern: [lecturing] You must remember I'm driven out of Germany as well. And I came out of the Army in 1945, and enrolled at Columbia in German Department.
Guy Stern: I was going to be part of this war, oh absolutely. I felt rage at what happened to Europe. I felt rage what happened to Jews. Europe was raped by a very powerful, well disciplined, well oiled, military machine.
Narrator: This is the story of a group of young men in World War II. Many of them Jewish-German refugees. They escape the Nazis and found a new home in America. They knew the language and the psychology of the enemy better than anybody else. Fighting fascism was their goal. In Camp Ritchie, Maryland they prepared for their own kind of war.
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