The grandson of a Holocaust survivor tracks down the grand children of Nazi camp officiers. I ranked this movie #8 because it is how the officier’s future grandchildren show remorse and want to do something good because they did not know the true story of their parents. Toward the end, the grandson of the Nazi actually asks the Holocaust survivor’s grandson how he feels about the Holocaust and truly wants to
The Learning of The Holocaust The book Night by, Wiesel represented the holocaust. The book was a great way of expressing facts but it was hard for me to really see it. I think that the movie, The Boy In The Striped Pajamas explained the holocaust much more efficiently, and had a better understanding of emotion and gave the watcher a better visual for better comprehension.
For example when the man tried to steal soup during the raid, he was kilt because he did a wrong. That's why the soup tasted better than ever because he was not just stealing soup, he was taking the only thing the jews had to survive other than hope and their love ones, which were slowly disappearing. This little boy had committed no crime. He was simply a little boy who stuck with his father. This affected me a lot because it made me realize if I were there what would have happened to me.
I thought that the Colonel would stay alive. I also thought that the two leaders of the African American soldiers where not going to go up the hill with them. I felt very emotional when Colonel Shaw had gotten shoot and the flag holder, then the men picked the flag up right away and took it upon themselves to continue moving and fight, not only for themselves now, but also for Colonel Shaw, who had died fighting for the freedom of them. The part the affected me the most was when they throwing Colonel Shaw’s body in to the dug up ditch with the African American soldiers. This affected me because that is how he would of wanted to be buried, among his men.
I went from being happy and joyful to feeling a pit in my stomach. I always had an idea as to how terrible the Holocaust was. It was not until I stepped into the two exhibits that I truly felt the pain of the situation. Being surrounded by volunteers whose families were present, and even seeing some real life survivors changed the Holocaust from something I read in my textbook, to something that actually happened in real life to real people. I always felt the sadness that surrounded the topic.
The end of the film shares wonderful details regarding those who survived the holocaust. As an illustration, many of them moves to America. A couple form a family and has seven grandchildren. One young man becomes a doctor. Helena, the little sister, lives in Poland and is a doctor.
How could a person be so cruel to dozens of Jews and watch them die slowly? The Nazi soldiers had no mercy for the Jews even if they did nothing wrong to them. Lastly, the amount of suffering at Auschwitz and Buna was hard for me to read about. I couldn’t imagine how it felt to live in the conditions that the Jews had to live for years. Standing
He is great because he is telling the story of the holocaust. He is spreading the word warning people so that it never happens again and is never forgotten in the vast desert of time. He had the strength to pull through and he knew that in order for the holocaust to never be forgotten their needs to be somebody to tell the story. To tell of the horrors and crimes that were committed, He had to revisit those horrible memories in order to tell us which makes him a great man a hero. Even though he knew his dad wasn’t going to make it he kept pushing using all his strength in that maybe the tiniest of chances his dad would survive but he also knew that at one point he would need to stop and leave him just like the boy in the car with the bread who killed his dad.
“The most amazing thing for me is that every single person who sees a movie, not necessarily one of my movies, brings a whole set of unique experiences. Now, through careful manipulation and good storytelling, you can get everybody to clap at the same time, to hopefully laugh at the same time, and to be afraid at the same time” (“Steven Spielberg Quotes”). As the inspiration for how many films are produced, Steven Spielberg is a director, producer, and writer. Having won 3 Academy Awards, several of his movies have set box office records, including Jaws and E.T. the Extra Terrestrial. Steven Spielberg revolutionized the film industry through unique camera work and new subject matters in movies.
I think this time that I read it I had a very different take on the book. It makes me think about why people did this and were treated like this. When I think of how hitler treated the men and women like that i just don't understand and i liked this book and that it gabe details about how he was in the camp in a teen years and how like the man that wanted his tooth like some of those things shock me like yall are are struggling but you still have the audacity to be rude and selfish. When he describes some of the situations they were put through I really thought about what if we as Americans had to go through that and I know that we learn about it and things but just imagine going through it yourself. I want to learn more about the holocaust and hear all the stories.
I found the descending hallway that leads to the picture of Hitler particularly affecting. It really gave me a sense of doom as I descended down. Also. The sapling from Anne Frank 's tree gave a sense of hope at the end of the horror. although a somber note in a human account, it is account nonetheless some exhibits are a bit graphic but that is what the holocaust was graphic and unimaginable.
Artificial intelligence first revealed itself in 1818 with the first science fiction novel, Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. One-hundred-sixty-six years later, artificial intelligence is still a driving force in the science fiction genre, as demonstrated in William Gibson’s Neuromancer, published in 1984. It even shows up in science fiction movies, such as 2001: A Space Odyssey. Artificial intelligence is a common thread in science fiction because it acts as a mirror to the morality of humanity.
It baffles me to see how these men, women, and children were treated as animals. I ask the question, how could these owner treat the slaves like this and not have any regrets or fears as to what would happen to them when they die. It also made me think on the slaves who were not born slaves that came from Africa who did know the language, customs, and how they were up rooted from their lives. I always thought that slaves were separated from their families because one of the family members did wrong. This film taught me that that was not always the reason some slave owners sold members of the slave families just because they could.
What saddened me the most was that it seemed like people had not learned from the Holocaust what they should have. This also makes me feel that what we were doing there was much more important than we originally thought. The Holocaust is still a topic that needs to be talked about and taught. And that is what we were doing there: learning and
The horrendous acts committed during World War II still haunt people today. A lot of people did not realize the extent of the brutality that took place in concentration camps across the country until this film was released. The entire film is filled with 195 minutes of pure gut ranching brutal acts committed by Nazi armed men. The entire film is filled with true acts of violence showing the entire process of when a Jewish member of the community