9/10
An important piece of Hollywood history, as seen through a world tragedy.
21 November 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Movie actors, directors, studio heads, producers, composers, technicians. So many famous names, even more obscure names, but our cinema would not have been the same without them. The European expressionism of the 1920's and '30s took Hollywood by storm just as Nazism had taken Germany and later a good deal of Europe by storm. The personal experiences of the writers, directors and producers influenced their American works, so through hideous inhumane experiences, these filmmakers created some of the greatest examples of art that cinema has known.

With sincere narration by Sigourney Weaver, this documentary shows that art and history intertwined. Many left before the rise of Hitler, while others made it to Hollywood as refugees, most Jewish, some married to Jews, and others simply against the fascism taking over their homeland. It's sad yet at the same time triumphant, because it's about survival. Vintage photos and filmed personal footage, newsreels and movie clips, plus interviews with witnesses who were there. Lupita Tovar Kohner, who just passed away at the age of 106, risked her own safety and tells her side of the story, bringing cash out of Germany to aide her friends who had already left. Marlene Dietrich, already an American star, aided refugees and was branded a German traitor.

The documentary shows the rise of the German cinema after their loss of World War I, yet the creators of these classics ended up as targets simply for being Jewish. The influence on post Nazism Hollywood through the triumph of these refugees is then documented, as is how they used their passion for freedom to tell so many classics during the second world war. Lines in the scripts of their films do not deny their hatred of fascism. German actors, once the great stars of screen and cinema there, were not afraid of villainizing the Nazi. Other films using anti-Nazi allegories are explained, enlightening the audience to something they may not have picked up at the time. They do not go into the anti-Semitic backlash of the post year wars, but in 2 hours, there's enough material to give an idea of how these artists made an impact on the films of the time.

Made in 2009 70-80 years after this all occurred, this is especially potent today in the changing times the world is facing every day. This is still in the lifetime of many people still living, so there's a lot of important lessons to be had. Cinema entertains, certainly, but it also educates and humanizes an often cruel world. It reminds us through our humanity, creativity and spirituality to never let any single leader in our world dictate who will be top dog in society and who will be degraded and turned over to evil lawmakers to be tortured and killed. They say art imitates life, and with the passion of freedom, life as many had to suffer through will simply remain as pages in a history book.
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