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The Maelstrom: A Family Chronicle, Aufschub (Respite) screenings
2017-Apr-12 @ 19:30 - 21:09
The Dryden will screen The Maelstrom: A Family Chronicle (Péter Forgács, Netherlands 1997, 60 min., digital, Dutch w/subtitles), and Aufschub (Respite, Harun Farocki, Germany/Netherlands 2007, 39 min., digital).
The Maelstrom makes extraordinarily artful use of a considerable cache of home movies shot in the Netherlands before and during World War II. Information is conveyed through subtitles and a soundtrack of period sound—mostly radio broadcasts—and brooding, disturbing jazz by Tibor SzemzĂ…'. We see a Jewish family first living unknowingly in the shadow of the Holocaust and then trying to cope with it, still unaware of what it will finally mean. A shot of the film's photographer, Max Peereboom, and his family cheerfully sewing and doing general preparation for a trip to a "work camp"—when their destination was the nightmare of Auschwitz—adds a devastating dimension to our understanding that no Hollywood movie, no other documentary, has been able to provide. Respite consists of silent black-and-white films shot at Westerbork, a Dutch refugee camp established in 1939 for Jews fleeing Germany. In 1942, after the occupation of Holland, its function was reversed by the Nazis and it became a "transit camp." In 1944, the camp commander commissioned a film, shot by a prisoner, photographer Rudolf Breslauer.
[source: George Eastman Museum calendar, 2017-Apr-3]