Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Boys Who Challenged Hitler is quite good.
Thanks for recommending this!
I’m not the OP, but I bought it and read it and just gave it to my son. Excellent book.
Isn't it cool that this amazing, yet mostly unknown story was out there, just waiting to be told?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Boys Who Challenged Hitler is quite good.
Thanks for recommending this!
I’m not the OP, but I bought it and read it and just gave it to my son. Excellent book.
Anonymous wrote:The Boys Who Challenged Hitler is quite good.
Anonymous wrote:Re Jojo Rabbit - my husband is Jewish and lost most of his family in the Holocaust. We started watching this film at the recommendation of several people and he couldn't watch more than the first 10 minutes or so, said he couldn't handle seeing the Germans portrayed in such a light-hearted and "positive" way. Is the whole movie like this? Does anyone with a similar perspective feel the way he did? Should I (or we) try to watch the rest of the movie?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Re Jojo Rabbit - my husband is Jewish and lost most of his family in the Holocaust. We started watching this film at the recommendation of several people and he couldn't watch more than the first 10 minutes or so, said he couldn't handle seeing the Germans portrayed in such a light-hearted and "positive" way. Is the whole movie like this? Does anyone with a similar perspective feel the way he did? Should I (or we) try to watch the rest of the movie?
Russian PP here. I would have agreed with your DH if I have only seen first 10 min of the movie. When I started watching it, I was outraged by "normalization" of Hitler and Nazis. One of the reasons I liked the movie so much was that journey or realization from brainwashed "Hitler Youth" to orphan whose only true friend is Jewish girl. For someone who grew up being brainwashed by USSR propaganda machine the analogies were stark. Absolutely try to get a bit deeper into the movie.
Thanks, I think I will try watching it on my own and if I think it's worthwhile I'll encourage my husband to see it too.
I watched it with my son. We then tried to get my Jewish husband to watch, but he just couldn't. I'm not going to force him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Re Jojo Rabbit - my husband is Jewish and lost most of his family in the Holocaust. We started watching this film at the recommendation of several people and he couldn't watch more than the first 10 minutes or so, said he couldn't handle seeing the Germans portrayed in such a light-hearted and "positive" way. Is the whole movie like this? Does anyone with a similar perspective feel the way he did? Should I (or we) try to watch the rest of the movie?
Russian PP here. I would have agreed with your DH if I have only seen first 10 min of the movie. When I started watching it, I was outraged by "normalization" of Hitler and Nazis. One of the reasons I liked the movie so much was that journey or realization from brainwashed "Hitler Youth" to orphan whose only true friend is Jewish girl. For someone who grew up being brainwashed by USSR propaganda machine the analogies were stark. Absolutely try to get a bit deeper into the movie.
Thanks, I think I will try watching it on my own and if I think it's worthwhile I'll encourage my husband to see it too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Re Jojo Rabbit - my husband is Jewish and lost most of his family in the Holocaust. We started watching this film at the recommendation of several people and he couldn't watch more than the first 10 minutes or so, said he couldn't handle seeing the Germans portrayed in such a light-hearted and "positive" way. Is the whole movie like this? Does anyone with a similar perspective feel the way he did? Should I (or we) try to watch the rest of the movie?
Russian PP here. I would have agreed with your DH if I have only seen first 10 min of the movie. When I started watching it, I was outraged by "normalization" of Hitler and Nazis. One of the reasons I liked the movie so much was that journey or realization from brainwashed "Hitler Youth" to orphan whose only true friend is Jewish girl. For someone who grew up being brainwashed by USSR propaganda machine the analogies were stark. Absolutely try to get a bit deeper into the movie.
Anonymous wrote:Re Jojo Rabbit - my husband is Jewish and lost most of his family in the Holocaust. We started watching this film at the recommendation of several people and he couldn't watch more than the first 10 minutes or so, said he couldn't handle seeing the Germans portrayed in such a light-hearted and "positive" way. Is the whole movie like this? Does anyone with a similar perspective feel the way he did? Should I (or we) try to watch the rest of the movie?