These films deal with the Holocaust in Europe, comprising both documentaries and narratives. They began to be produced in the early 1940s before the extent of the Holocaust at that time was widely recognized.[1]
The films span a range of genres, with documentary films including footage filmed both by the Germans for propaganda and by the Allies, compilations, survivor accounts and docudramas, and narrative films including war films, action films, love stories, psychological dramas, and even comedies.[1]
Narrative films: 1940s · 1950s · 1960s · 1970s · 1980s · 1980s · 1990s · 2000s · 2010s · 2020s Documentary films: 1940s · 1950s · 1960s · 1970s · 1980s · 1990s · 2000s · 2010s · 2020s See also · References
Germany
Official Selection of the 1999 Berlin International Film Festival,[14][15] winner of the Grimme-Preis in 2001.[14][15] Was criticized for tendentious editing making Eichmann appear in a more positive light and especially making prosecutor Gideon Hausner appear to display rude and unfair behavior in court, by Stewart Tryster, director of the Steven Spielberg Jewish Film Archive, in his 2005 documentary Editing the Truth Away: The Eichmann Trial and The Specialist .[16][17]
Released on French VHS and DVD under its original title, on NTSC VHS as Adolf Eichmann: The Specialist, on Region 1 DVD as The Specialist: Portrait of a Modern Criminal, and on German VHS as Ein Spezialist. All of these home video editions are currently out-of-print.
Forgotten Transports to Latvia (2007), 85 min.
Forgotten Transports to Belarus (2008), 85 min.
Forgotten Transports to Poland (2010), 85 min.
Brazil
English title: Annihilation - The Destruction of Europe's Jews
Had I known of the actual horrors of the German concentration camps, I could not have made The Great Dictator, I could not have made fun of the homicidal insanity of the Nazis
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