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The Boy in the Striped Pajamas by Mark Herman
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DVD detailsActor: David Hayman, David Thewlis, Jim Norton, Sheila Hancock, Vera Farmiga Director: Mark Herman Brand: Buena Vista Home Video DVD: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Original Language); Spanish (Subtitled) Format: AC-3, Color, Dolby, DVD, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen Picture Format: 1.85:1 Running Time: 94 minutes DVD Release Date: 2009-03-10 Audience Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) Studio: MIRAMAX
DVD Reviews of The Boy in the Striped PajamasDVD Review: Quick & Fast Service Summary: 5 StarsQuick and Fast Service... I ordered this for a Christmas Gift... I would most certainly order from them again!!
DVD Review: the boy in the striped pajamas Summary: 5 Starsi received my order in a few days and am completely satisfied with it....great movie
DVD Review: even the most delicate of kinds are struck Summary: 5 StarsThe boy in the striped pajamas is a very heart warming movie but also very heart wrenching. The movie is obviously set in world war II, is based on a german boy named Bruno who goes around exploring the world under the roof of his father and mother. As Bruno explores his new house and surroundings he finds that things are a little different then how things used to be. The movie's actors are never boring or tiring, in fact you find that everyone is thier own character. I don't want to say to much other than if the subject of holocaust interests you in any way or if youve seen movies like shindlers list, you might want to give this one a try.
I thought the boy in the striped pajamas was pretty good overall, I wouldnt call it a "BRILLIANT" movie like some reviewers may call it, as I never find these sort of stories brilliant, perhaps the movie was well done lets just say.
I will say this, the story has a very clever twist.Go ahead and rent it.
DVD Review: Emotionally Powerful! Summary: 5 StarsWhat to say about this film? It was engaging. It was moving. It was powerfully emotional. Jack Scanlan as Schmuel was an excellent choice for the 'boy in the striped pajamas' and I had read somewhere that that young boy was able to pull at your emotions with just his facial expressions and he pulls even stronger when he does speak. Whoever wrote that was completely right. As does the innocence of the friendship that builds between the son of a German Nazi Commander, and a boy that lives in 'the farm' on the other side of an electrified barbed wire fence. I found myself rooting for their friendship, even though I knew that it would be short lived. I expected it to end when Bruno betrays his friendship to Schmuel when he lies about Schmuel taking food. But it didn't. The boys continue their friendship through the fence and in an attempt to apologize to Schmuel for lying, Bruno sneeks across (or under) the fence to help Schmuel find his father who has gone missing within 'the farm'. The Nazi Commander and his wife discover their son is missing and start a frantic search to find their son. The movie then takes an unexpected turn (although, somewhat expected if you know any history about concentration camps) and it's at that moment when your emotions are truly put to the test. For me, I had my emotions in check up until the two boys meet and from that point on, there was no holding them back. The tears flowed to the very end.
It's a powerful movie and I highly recommend it!
DVD Review: Mourning and Presentation - Which Side of the Fence are We on? Summary: 4 StarsThe Boy in the Striped Pajamas is a movie that left me conflicted, to say the least. It involves a friendship that comes from the most unlikely of places, and ends with a tragedy that involves droves of Jews and one German boy. While I will not say exactly what happens, I will say that feeling bad for this one boy seems to be a bad thing in some ways because I felt sorry for him only because of the way he was presented. His father was the director of a camp that kills Jews, his family a beast filled with blind followers, and one boy looking into the Jewish camps and wondering why he wasn't allowed to play the game the Jews were allowed to play.
As far as movies go, the movie was done well and shows something about the youth of a country that killed at leisure. There is the confusion, the wonder, the want to help, and all of the ignorance that youth can breed. It accomplishes everything it sets out to do, too, making you feel sorrow when the curtain comes down. I hope that the movie was also meant to make a person examine this sorrow they felt, knowing that the word genocide is associated with the thing they just watched. The other people in the striped pajamas were not props but were instead reminders of people that were going to die a horrid death, and yet one boy on the wrong side of the fence was the thing that we were watching. His life, his actions, his family's sorrow; these things were the things we saw. What we did not see were the pieces that were missing from the puzzle; the families that could not cry because they were no longer anything save ash mistaken for snow on the breeze.
Do I recommend the movie? I'm not sure. I do know that I liked the movie, that it moved me, but I'm not sure it moved me in the way it was supposed to. It has a complexity to it, one that I hope people do not miss, but that several newspaper reviews seemed to lose in their interpretation of the movie. I suppose I'm saying that I recommend the movie but only to those that see the entire picture, and mourn for the entire picture as it is conceived.
Description of The Boy in the Striped PajamasFrom Miramax Films, the studio that brought you the Academy Award winning Life is Beautiful (Best Foreign Language Film, 1998) comes The Boy in the Striped Pajamas. Based on the best selling novel by John Boyne, it's an unforgettable motion picture experience powerful and moving beyond words (Pete Hammond, Hollywood.com). Bored and restless in his new home, Bruno, an innocent and naive eight year old, ignores his mother and sets off on an adventure in the woods. Soon he meets a young boy, and a surprising friendship develops. Set during World War II, this remarkable and inspiring story about the power of the human spirit will capture your heart and engage your mind. Bonus Features include Deleted Scenes With Optional Commentary by Writer, Director Mark Herman and Author John Boyne, Friendship Beyond the Fence Featurette, Feature Commentary by Writer, Director Mark Herman and Author John Boyne The innocence of childhood savagely collides with the Holocaust in The Boy in the Striped Pajamas. Bruno (Asa Butterfield) knows that his father is a soldier and that they have to move to a new house in the country... a house near what he thinks is a farm. But his father isn't just a soldier; he's a high-ranking officer in Hitler's elite SS troops who's just been placed in command of Auschwitz. As Bruno explores the woods around the house, he discovers the concentration camp's perimeter fence. On the other side sits a boy his own age, with whom Bruno strikes up a friendship--a friendship that will have tragic consequences. The Boy in the Striped Pajamas is most powerful in the details: The casual brutality of a Nazi lieutenant; the uncomfortable juxtaposition of the family's domestic life with glimpses of the treatment of the imprisoned Jews; a ghastly propaganda film suggesting that life at Auschwitz was like a holiday. But more than anything else, Butterfield's performance makes this film compelling. The young actor perfectly conveys Bruno's limited perspective even as the film carefully unveils the larger, darker reality. The movie's ending will undoubtedly spark arguments, but only because of the emotional complexity of what happens--The Boy in the Striped Pajamas is made with great skill and compassion. Also featuring David Thewlis (Naked) and Vera Farmiga (The Departed) as Bruno's parents. --Bret Fetzer
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