Minggu, 08 Maret 2015
Shoah on AllMovie Shoah (1985)
Shoah is an astonishing film on a number of levels, starting with its
own existence -- a documentary on a subject so horrendous, and horrific,
that few potential filmgoers really want to think much about it, or the
events related within. But Jewish-French filmmaker Claude Lanzmann took
the plunge, head-first into his subject, in the hope that the audience
would follow for 570 minutes. And as it turned out, Lanzmann's extreme
approach to filmmaking was precisely the correct one to take in dealing
with his subject, the Nazi extermination of Europe's Jews from 1938
through 1945. At first, in its opening minutes, the documentary seems to
be shaping up as a relentless parade of interviews, all done in the
subjects' original languages and translated as audio live in front of
the camera, as well as on-screen. But Shoah is a lot more than a
succession of talk in multiple languages. Rather, Lanzmann did what one
only wishes the Stuart Schulberg documentary Nuremberg (1947) could have
done -- he brings us and many of his subjects (including some low-level
perpetrators) to the sites of the crimes in question, so that we
perceive the dimensions and settings when they tell of the vile acts of
murder and desecration they were obliged to commit, or which were
committed upon them or those around them (including family members -- in
a quietly horrific moment, one survivor, recalls being forced to carry
out the orders to hide a graveyard, and tells of finding the bodies of
his own family in one layer of corpses). What's more, the calm of the
talk, and the detachment brought about by the need for translation, has
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