The Last Days

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List Price:
$19.95
Hungary Hotels Travel Price: $32.99
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Manufacturer: Polygram USA Video Starring: Robin Zisblatt, Joachim von Ribbentrop, Katsugo Miho, Josef Goebbels, Tom Lantos Directed By: James Moll
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 Audience Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) Binding: DVD EAN: 0044004499729 Format: Closed-captioned Label: Polygram USA Video Manufacturer: Polygram USA Video Number Of Items: 1 Picture Format: Letterbox Publisher: Polygram USA Video Region Code: 1 Release Date: 1999-11-30 Running Time: 87 Studio: Polygram USA Video Theatrical Release Date: 1998
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Editorial Reviews:
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In the last year of World War II, German defeat was inevitable. Yet rather than reinforcing his troops and focusing his efforts on battle, Hitler chose to renew his campaign to eliminate the Jews of Europe. Hungary, which had remained mostly untouched during the war, found her Jews being rounded up and shipped off to concentration camps where they were systematically and brutally killed during these last days. This documentary, directed by James Moll and produced through the Survivors of the Shoah Visual History Foundation, whose goal is to document the memories of those who lived through the Holocaust, records the stories of five Hungarian Jews who managed to survive. The five survivors, all now living in the United States, movingly tell how they made it and recount the tragedies they witnessed: Tom Lantos, a Congressman from California, whose 17 grandchildren are a gift from his two daughters to try to make up for the families Lantos and his wife lost; Alice Lok Cahana, an artist who uses her painting to testify to what she saw and to grieve for the meaningless death of her sister Edith; Bill Basch, who while working for the resistance escaped from Hungarian police by joining a group of Jews that were, unknowingly, being led to Buchenwald; Renee Firestone, an educator at Simon Wiesenthal Center's Educational Outreach Program, whose touching connection to the past is discovered in the simple gift of a bathing suit given to her by her father; and Irene Zisblatt, a grandmother who smuggled out, at tremendous risk, a few precious diamonds in order to buy bread when there was no more food to be had. Other interviewees include American liberators, a superkommando, and a Nazi doctor who performed experiments on camp inmates. While the stories are tragic and watching this documentary is a tearful experience, the final message is one of hope, as the five people return to Hungary and the camps with their families to confront their pasts and say their prayers. While the occasionally graphic footage will disturb, this Oscar-winning film is one that should be shared with family as a way of educating and reminding us, "Never again." --Jenny Brown
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: The Calm and Deliberate Murder of Hungarian Jews Comment: Many Hungarian Jews perceived themselves as loyal and enthusiastic citizens of their chosen country. They took it for granted that their Christian neighbors were true friends and wished them no harm. This illusion was brutally shattered after the Nazi invasion. These Christians often took special delight in harassing Jews and handing them over to Hitler's thugs. What happened to God? Why did He allow such evil to exist? You will find the interviews with these survivors of the Holocaust riveting.
The Hungarian aspect of the Holocaust is most interesting, if for no other reason, but to show how committed the Nazis were to slaughtering Jews and others deemed racially inferior---even if it jeopardized their war efforts. Indeed, it appears that Jew killing was deemed of paramount importance. Nothing else was allowed to stand in the way. One might even argue that the Third Reich's emphasis on sending victims to the death camps cost it the war.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Highest recommendation!! Comment: Spielberg's documentary about the holocaust is excellent - a very moving film. This should be mandatory viewing by high school history students everywhere, especially in those countries who deny the last Holocaust as they prepare for the next one.
Customer Rating:      Summary: An incredible journey Comment: This moving documentary covers the lives of 5 Hungarian survivors who were young people during the war and who are all now United States citizens. They are Alice Lok Cahana, Congressman Tom Lantos, Irene Zisblatt, Bill Basch, and Renée Firestone. Although I had previously heard or read some of these people's stories, I hadn't heard all of them, nor all of the details provided here. Also included are interviews with former Nazi doctor Hans Münch, some American liberators, and Greek survivor Dario Gabbai (whom I'd also previously seen on at least one other documentary), who is, by his own estimates, one of only 4 Sonderkommandos who were alive at the time this film was shot (1998).
The fate of Hungarian Jewry has always had a special fascination for me, since they were largely still intact until the spring of 1944, when the Nazis invaded their country (19 March), put them into ghettos, and between May and July sent the majority of them to their deaths. A huge population that had been largely untouched was suddenly nearly obliterated in the blink of an eye, and in no other conquered nation-state in Europe was the Final Solution carried out with such frightening speed, savageness, barbarity, and support and assistance from the locals. At least in Budapest, where Congressman Lantos and Mr. Basch (until he was accidentally deported to Buchenwald) were, it was relatively safer because it was a big city and not one of the small towns and cities where the people weren't as cosmopolitan and open-minded. This documentary covers these 5 survivors before the war, during the war, and after the war, including their respective journeys, decades later, back to their hometowns and to the various camps where they were enslaved.
Some people complain that there are "too many" books and films about the Shoah, and that after awhile it all starts to sound the same, or that the subject is too depressing for one to voluntarily immerse oneself in, but no two stories are exactly alike. Each story is unique and worth telling and remembering, before it's too late to be recorded, and so that hopefully new generations will learn what hatred can lead to if left unchecked and unprotested, will realise that hatred isn't something one is born with, but rather something that one learns. Each of these stories have their own unique touches, like Renée's beautiful bathing suit, Alice's artwork, the hanukiyah a liberated prisoner made from cement and nails and which decades later, a few years after his death, was finally delivered to Dr. Paul Parks, one of his liberators, and Irene's diamonds from her mother, which she managed to preserve all through the war and today wears in a tear-shaped pendant on a necklace, a necklace she intends to pass on through each firstborn female in her family line in perpetuity. The most haunting story for me was when Alice talked about how she and her sister Edith began singing "Shalom Aleychem" in the outhouse at Auschwitz, a short time after their arrival, to welcome Shabbos in spite of their surroundings, and soon all of the people around them, whatever their nation of origin, joined in in the haunting Hebrew melody. And all of the survivors report feeling pride and joy in having large families, rebuilding what the Nazis tried to take away from them, many coming from one or just a few survivors of what had been very large families.
Extras include outtakes, photo galleries, the theatrical trailer, and filmographies of the producers, cinematographer, director and editor, photographer, music composer, and the executive producer. The film is also available for viewing in both widescreen and fullscreen. The only extra that seemed a bit out of place was executive producer Steven Spielberg's introduction to the Shoah Foundation, seeing as that very same introduction is already included at the beginning of the film itself!
Customer Rating:      Summary: 5 personal heartbreaking stories of what once happened. Comment: This has to be one of the best documentary films I've ever run across. The personal stories of 5 survivors of the holocaust are laid before you raw and uncensored as they should be. The survivors were all young at the time and their stories told with their photographs shows these extraordinary people to have been at the time very ordinary just like you and me. Their journeys back to the camps they were held in makes this as real as you can get. Their strength and ability to carry on awes me to no end. All ages should see this film so that we never ever forget what happened not so long ago. I own this film and am very proud to have it apart of my dvd library. I gave it 5 stars only because thats the highest rating you can give it here. It's truly worth 5 more to make this a 10.
Customer Rating:      Summary: one of the stronger entries in the holocaust documentary factory Comment: yet another holocaust movie, the surest way next to mental retardation and AIDS to win a best documentary oscar. this one is really quite a bit better than the others, focusing on five very different survivors from hungary, and giving great insight into how their futures were shaped and their need to return to see what remains of their old homes. very affecting, and free of rhetoric: allowing the experience to speak for itself, rather than overlaying it with rhetoric. honest and spiritually satisfying.
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