Review of The Wall

The Wall (1982 TV Movie)
9/10
Basic realism and authenticity all the way of the Warsaw ghetto.
11 October 2020
John Hersey is a great author who has distinguished himself from the beginning after the war, by first of all "A Bell for Adano", an unforgettable classic also as film demonstrating a deep sense of humanity. For this book he has used authentic diaries and accounts of survivors from the Warsaw ghetto, so the story and film could be said to be next to quite authentic and is even filmed in Warsaw. It is more convincing than Andrzjej Wajda's great film of the same horrors, but this is no feature film but a television series, just like "Holocaust", "The Winds of War" and other great Second World War TV epics, while only Polanski's "The Pianist" can vie with this one for convincing authenticity, also based on a true story. As a whole, it's a great production with fine music and performances, especially by Eli Wallach and Tom Conti, and it is well sustained the whole way - you will find no difficulty in seeing the whole thing (2½ hours) in one sitting. There is no speculation, no conjecture, no romanticizing, but plain downright realism all the way, so it should be endorsed as a must, more so than "Holocaust" and "Winds of War" which are mainly fiction, for a vital testimony of important facts of the Second World War.
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