Italian Jews journey back from Auschwitz after WWII, confronting challenges of reintegrating into society and uncertainties about familial circumstances awaiting them at home.Italian Jews journey back from Auschwitz after WWII, confronting challenges of reintegrating into society and uncertainties about familial circumstances awaiting them at home.Italian Jews journey back from Auschwitz after WWII, confronting challenges of reintegrating into society and uncertainties about familial circumstances awaiting them at home.
- Awards
- 7 wins & 9 nominations total
- Irina
- (as Tatyana Meshcherina)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaFinal film written and directed by Francesco Rosi.
- Quotes
[last lines]
Primo Levi: [narrating] You who live secure in your warm houses, who return at evening to find hot food and friendly faces. Consider if this is a man who labors in the mud, who knows no peace, who fights for a crust of bread, who dies at a yes or a no. Meditate that this took place.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Movie Show: Episode dated 19 October 1997 (1997)
- SoundtracksMadonina
Written by Giovanni D'Anzi (as G. D'Anzi)
I liked the film for its apparent accuracy in location and the detail of what it was like for some of the Jews liberated from Auschwitz to find their way back to their homelands. Virtually helpless, the Jews in Primo Levi's autobiography embark on an odyssey that eventually gets them back to their homes -- at least some of them. All the more surprising is that Stalin's Soviet Union is their main benefactor throughout all of this. While this is supposed to be an autobiography, I have to wonder at some of the scenes, for example, when the train load of Jews arrives at the Munich main rail station, a former Werhmacht soldier kneels before them. In another, a Jew with barely enough food for himself, gives some bread to German POWs in Russia so that he can watch them fight over it. The irony is unmistakable.
Overall, I liked the film. It's one you have to see more than once because of all the detail. It's a bit difficult to follow the dialog in part, because much of it is in the language of the people who are represented: Poles, Russians, Ukrainians, French, Germans, Italians. Not only that, but the English dialog is accented and somewhat difficult to follow.
I intend to see it at least one or two more times in order to get the full effect of this very well done story.
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Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $71,448
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $23,165
- Apr 26, 1998
- Runtime2 hours 5 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1