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Outubro de 1944, Auschwitz-Birkenau. Saul Ausländer é um membro húngaro do Sonderkommando, o grupo de prisioneiros judeus isolados do campo de concentração e forçados a dar apoio aos Nazis no processo de extermínio em larga escala. Durante os trabalhos num dos crematórios, Saul descobre o corpo de um rapaz que ele reconhece como sendo o seu filho. Enquanto os Sonderkommando planeiam uma revolta, Saul fica obcecado com uma missão impossível: salvar o corpo do rapaz de uma autopsia e encontrar  um rabino para lhe recitar as orações Kaddish e realizar o funeral. (Midas Filmes)

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Críticas (12)

POMO 

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português Uma combinação inteligente de quase cinematografia POV, que o atrai para a ação de forma documental, e o cenário de horror dum inferno da vida real que talvez ninguém queira experimentar tão de perto. Nenhuma outra palavra além de «inferno» é mais adequada para as cenas noturnas junto aos buracos. Respeitável para uma estreia na direção a partir da Hungria. Se ainda não viu The Grey Zone e não conhece o termo «Sonderkommando», este filme vai matá-lo. ()

DaViD´82 

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inglês A movie without the past and the future, which will be (not only because of this) described as a holocaust-style Come and See (1985). Thanks to the chosen format of "long scenes over the shoulder", it is unusually intense, suggestive (amazing sound work!) and gets under you skin very quickly and for a long time. Maybe too much, because it's constantly moving and it is so dynamic that the viewer (nor the character) will be sitting on the edge of his char all the time. What can happen is that the viewer becomes used to it by the end of the movie, although the horrors during the Sonderkommando shift are shown "seemingly accidentally", are sidelined and presented as a daily routine. But as a result it is even more terrifying and disturbing. No matter whether you become used to it or not and whether you can get over it or not, it is indisputable that Saul's son is one of the exceptions confirming the rule that the film's qualities and the importance and urgency of the theme form one functional unit, which rightfully deserves "festival fame". If nothing else, it is because such a view of the film depiction of the Holocaust through the industrialization of death was desperately needed, because although these events are captured in literature from time to time they are almost never depicted in a movie. ()

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EvilPhoEniX 

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inglês A very authentical portrayal of the hell of a concentration camp that focuses on the Sonderkommando, auxiliary Jews who send other Jews to the gas chambers and also to the ovens. What annoyed me was the main character, as the camera took close-ups of his face quite often and he wasn't a very pretty sight to look at, which might still be passable if he didn't also annoy me with his behaviour, as he spends the whole film looking for a rabbi and wanting to bury his son, and that didn't sit right with me as the central plot. If the film had focused more on the riot or shown footage of the gas chambers or the ovens, it could have been a competition to A Serbian Film. Still, this is a disturbing film from a horrific setting and I don't envy anyone who had to endure it. The unconventional cinematography is interesting. Decent, but I could imagine it being better.70% ()

Lima 

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inglês The wiping of vomit and blood and the removal of fresh corpses from the just-used gas chamber, the precisely organized loading of those corpses into furnaces, the constant dumping of ashes into the river; people reduced to mere numerical units, "pieces", worthless waste – killing as a manufacturing process. Killing as a perfectly lubricated and thought-out machine, whose puppets and operators in one – sonderkommando – have prolonged their lives by at least a few months, and who carry the corpses with complacency, without emotions and emotional outpourings (what else is left for them), as if they were operating a machine tool. And in that darkness of inhumanity and filth, like a faint glimmer of humanity, there’s the desire of one of the sonderkommando to bury – as civilized society should – one dead boy. A film that everyone should watch. Especially the fucked up Nazi dumbasses, who I'm under no illusions would be moved, but if even just one in a thousand said to themselves "God, what an asshole I am!", this movie would make sense. Only an idiot can "get bored" or "fall asleep", as I have read here a few times, with this overwhelming experience. ()

J*A*S*M 

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inglês (BE2CAN, Lucerna) I’m doubting between four, in recognition for its merits, and three for the experience. After all the hype from Cannes I was expecting more. It’s a different take on the monstrous machinery of the Holocaust from the point of view of a poor bastard who gets mixed up in it. The intention is clear, the execution is undoubtedly appropriate, but I’m not sure it’s enough for me in 107 minutes… ()

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