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Broken Silence

Broken Silence
Directors: Janos Szasz, Luis Puenzo, Vojtech Jasny, Pavel Chukhraj, Marcel Lozinski
Actors: Jack Fuchs, Liza Zajak-novera, Robert Lamberg, Benjamin Mehl, Alejandro Horvath
Studio: Universal Studios
Category: DVD

List Price: $26.98
Buy New: $4.45
You Save: $22.53 (84%)



New (51) Used (21) from $4.16

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 29389

Format: Color, Dolby, Dvd-video, Full Screen, Subtitled, Black & White, Ntsc
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled)
Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Number Of Items: 1
Running Time: 283
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

MPN: MCAD24700D
ISBN: 0783289758
UPC: 025192470028
EAN: 9780783289755
ASIN: B00018D4PO

Theatrical Release Date: April 15, 2002
Release Date: March 9, 2004
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand New - Factory sealed from Universal Studios - Ships 1st class mail - Thank You !!

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Five filmmakers offer their views on the jewish concentration camps of world war ii. Studio: Uni Dist Corp. (mca) Release Date: 03/09/2004 Run time: 300 minutes Rating: Nr Director: Pavel Chukhraj


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Evil and the mercy of God   April 7, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

5 episodes, 5 documentaries from 5 countries where the Jews were persecuted and killed during the Holocaust. All episodes are absorbing. The directors let their protagonists/survivors tell their stories. Nobody but the survivors star here. The images are crude, the stories are told first hand.

Of course one would have asked them tens of questions while watching them. To me it's just priceless to be able to see and listen to these people tell their miraculous stories of survival, sorrowful stories of loss. A privilege. These documentaries are not only about Jewish history. They are a testimony to the extreme cruelty and evil that humans can infringe on others. Those who don't believe in a good God will have to think twice, because Satan is real indeed.



5 out of 5 stars Powerful stuff   July 12, 2006
 13 out of 13 found this review helpful

This disc consists of five short films about the Shoah, narrated by survivors living in various countries. The idea behind this collection was to make films in nations that have never really heard of or been taught about the Shoah, where such tales of horror are not familiar or well-known the way they are in a place like America or Canada. (It was also surprising to see that the people in four of the films obviously went back to their homelands, even after all they'd been through there and how in many places the townspeople were willing accomplices for the Germans.) Side one of the disc contains 'Some Who Survived,' 'Eyes of the Holocaust,' and 'Children from the Abyss.' Side two contains 'I Remember' and 'Hell on Earth.'

'Some Who Survived' ('Algunos Que Vivieron') was originally released in Argentina, though it contains interviews from survivors now living in Argentina, Chile, and Uruguay. This is interesting because we ordinarily hear about survivors who moved to America, Canada, Israel, and sometimes Australia and England, but not so much about survivors who began new lives in South America, even though quite a few of them did move there. I also enjoyed the fact that it was in Spanish, a language I haven't really had much of a chance to hear or make much use of in awhile despite the fact that I studied it for 7 years. The survivors in this film all came from Eastern Europe, though they weren't all from the same place, which gives this film a bit more variety in its approach. In the other films, the survivors being interviewed were all from the same nations. This film is also of interest because towards the end it goes into the anti-Semitic terrorist acts committed in Argentina in recent decades, and the fact that many Nazis fled to South America, proving that hatred hasn't died yet and that many perpetrators evaded justice.

'Eyes of the Holocaust' ('A Holocaust Szemei') concerns the Shoah in Hungary, and is based around a young girl who has taken refuge from a heavy rain by going into a building where she finds a book with the abovementioned title. She sits down on a staircase and reads the book by candlelight. The book is kind of a dictionary/encyclopedia of the Shoah, with key words, events, and dates, and after she starts reading each selected entry aloud, we cut to the testimony of the survivors talking about the emotions and experiences behind them, making them more than just routine definitions and explanations in a book.

'Children from the Abyss' ('Dyeti iz Bezdna') is about the survivors from the former Soviet Union, and is narrated by the director Pavel Chukhrai in between the interviews with the survivors, who were children at the time of these events. The situation in the former Soviet Union was many times quite different from that in a place like Hungary or Poland, because a lot of these people never even made it to the camps. Many times entire villages were shot down into mass graves, such as in Babiy Yar. Very rarely did someone manage to run away, to be spared by one of the executioners (German or Soviet), or to crawl out of the pit of bodies and make it to safety when the coast was clear. The director explains that some of the pictures and films do not feature the children who are now elderly survivors, since many times they had no families or pictures to go home to afterwards, but that it shouldn't matter, since they represent all of the children, both the miraculous few who survived and the countless more who were murdered. Those who managed to escape into the part of the Soviet Union beyond Nazi control often had a better chance of survival, but for those who remained in the part of the country invaded by the Germans or who didn't flee in time, their odds of survival were much much lower.

'I Remember' ('Pamietam') was directed by the legendary Andrzej Wajda, and employs a different technique than the other films. It's shot entirely in black and white and contains no historical film footage or still pictures from the past. Unlike the other films, here only four survivors are interviewed. We periodically cut between their testimonies and images of a group of young people on the March of the Living. This strategy could be considered very effective in that it forces the viewer to pay attention to the testimonies and not be distracted by other images, but it can also seem a bit dull at times because it's not backed up by accompanying footage or pictures that bring to life what these four men are talking about. It's also interesting to note how for the most part, these men relate their stories in a steady manner, quite keeping their emotions under control instead of, like a number of the other survivors do, sometimes having to temporarily stop because they were overwhelmed by the memories and broke down.

'Hell on Earth' ('Peklo na Zemi') is from the Czech Republic, where the majority of people were taken to Terezin (Theresienstadt) before being deported to Poland. There are some pretty horrifying images here (not to say that the other films don't have stark and shocking pictures and film footage). The images of dead emaciated corpses and the living-dead here are perhaps so shocking and horrifying because some of them are in color, and we're so used to seeing and thinking about these events in black and white. Color just brings them to life in a shocking and vivid way, makes the horror even more real and undeniable. Some of the survivors were children at the time, and some of them were teenagers or young adults. They all have compelling stories to tell, even in spite of their different backgrounds and ages.

All in all, these films are highly recommended. They represent a wide range of experiences and were made to bring these stories to people who don't really know anything about the Shoah, and the linguistic variety was also an added bonus to someone who loves languages and has studied three of the five represented and is interested in the other two. These aren't exactly the types of films you watch on a rainy day or to kill time, but they are important moving historical documents that should be seen by anyone who cares about remembering the past and preventing such things from happening ever again. It's easy to refuse to watch such images and to hear such testimonies because of how shocking, disturbing, unsettling, and heartbreaking it is, but sometimes one has no choice but to hear and see such things, to honestly face the past, to be shocked and jolted out of complacency. Who could ever forget such words and images, and who wouldn't be angry and compelled enough to want to work to ensure that it never happens again?



4 out of 5 stars Survivors speak   November 7, 2005
 10 out of 11 found this review helpful

This is a very good collection of 5 short documentaries-relating the tales of holocaust survivors.
Personally, I liked "Some who lived" the best--but this may be partially due to the fact that it was in Spanish and I wasn't as preoccupied with sub-titles as in the other four. Comparisons between Nazi Germany and Argentina are worthy reminders of how soon the past could be forgotten.
"Eyes of the Holocaust" and "Hell on Earth" relaying Hungarian and Czech experiences are about equal in interest--tying for second best stories.
I really like Wajda--but his epidsode "I Remember" is probably the least interesting--probably since it consists almost entirely of spoken remembrances--very little use of visual aids of any sort. Additionally, one of the survivors seemed to be embellishing his story--I could be wrong--but it was the impression I got. For those unfamiliar with Wajda--this is from a Polish persepctive.
The worst--although not the dullest is "Children from the Abyss"-from a Russian perspective-I had problems with this film because it included scenes from movies--interspersed with genuine footage-although admissions of these liberties were included-they were still potentially misleading. Aside from that--it was quite an interesting episode.
All in all a very good presentation. Though these documentaries represented five different countries--several pictures of victims were repeated in several episodes--one crippled girl appeared in three of these five stories for instance--not a major problem-but the over all effect of this collection would have been stronger in my opinion if this had been avoided.
Definitely worth watching however--though Wajda's "I remember" may be a little dry for some, and I regret Chukhraj's use of movie clips.

Shalom!



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