The Grey Zone, film (2001, U.S.A. ) directed by Tim Blake Nelson
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Grey_Zone
The Grey Zone
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The Grey Zone
Theatrical release poster
Directed by
Tim Blake Nelson
Produced by
Avi Lerner
Danny Lerner
Pamela Koffler
Christine Vachon
Tim Blake Nelson .
Screenplay by
Tim Blake Nelson
Based on
Auschwitz: a Doctor's Eyewitness Account
by Miklós Nyiszli and
The Grey Zone
by Tim Black Nelson
Starring
David Arquette
Steve Buscemi
Harvey Keitel
Mira Sorvino
Allan Corduner
Daniel Benzali
Music by
Jeff Danna
Cinematography
Russell Lee Fine
Editing by
Michelle Botticelli
Tim Blake Nelson
Studio
Millennium Films
The Goatsingers
Killer Films
Distributed by
Lionsgate
Release date(s)
September 13, 2001 (TIFF)
October 18, 2002 (limited)
Running time
108 minutes
Country
United States
Language
English
Box office
$517,872[1]
The Grey Zone is a 2001 film directed by Tim Blake Nelson and starring David Arquette, Steve Buscemi, Harvey Keitel, Mira Sorvino and Daniel Benzali. It is based on the book Auschwitz: A Doctor's Eyewitness Account written by Dr. Miklós Nyiszli.
The title comes from a chapter in the book The Drowned and the Saved by Holocaust survivor Primo Levi. The film tells the story of the Jewish Sonderkommando XII in the Auschwitz concentration camp in October 1944. These prisoners were made to assist the camp's guards in shepherding their victims to the gas chambers and then disposing of their bodies in the ovens.
Contents
[hide] 1 Plot
2 Cast
3 Production and release
4 See also
5 References
6 External links
[edit] Plot
The film opens in October 1944, in the Auschwitz-Birkenau extermination camp. A small group of Sonderkommandos are plotting an insurrection that, they hope, will destroy at least one of the camp's four crematoria and gas chambers. They are receiving firearms from Polish citizens in the nearby village and gunpowder from the UNIO munitions factory; the women prisoners who work in the UNIO are smuggling the powder to the men’s camp among the bodies of their dead workers. The women's activity is eventually discovered by the Germans, they are savagely tortured, but they don't reveal the plot.
Meanwhile, a Hungarian-Jewish doctor, Miklós Nyiszli (Allan Corduner), who works for the Nazi scientist Josef Mengele in an experimental medical lab, has received permission from Mengele himself to visit his wife and daughter in the women’s labor camp. Nyiszli is quite concerned about the safety of his family and believes that Mengele’s orders will keep them from the gas chambers.
A new trainload of Hungarian Jewish prisoners arrives and all are immediately sent to the gas chambers. As the group is given instructions about "delousing," a fearful, angry man in the group begins shouting questions at one of the Sonderkommando, Hoffman (Arquette), who has been issuing the instructions. Hoffman beats him to death in an outburst of frustration, in an attempt to make the man stop talking. After the gassing of this same group, a badly shaken Hoffman finds a young girl alive beneath a pile of bodies. He removes her from the chamber, and, after informing the leader of the insurgency, Schlermer (Daniel Benzali), takes her to a storage room and summons Nyiszli, who revives her. The group decides to hide her in the children’s camp. While the prisoners hide her in a dressing room, SS-Oberscharführer Eric Muhsfeldt (Keitel) suddenly walks in. Noticing that one of the prisoners present, Abramowics (Buscemi), is there illegally, he shoots him, prompting the girl to scream and to be discovered. Nyiszli then takes Muhsfeldt outside and tells him about the uprising, but cannot tell him where or when it will begin. Muhsfeldt agrees to protect the young girl after the uprising is suppressed.
The insurrection begins and Crematoria I and III are destroyed with the smuggled explosives. All the Sonderkommandos who survive the explosions and gunfights with the SS are captured. They are held until the fire in the crematorium is extinguished and executed shortly after. Hoffmann and a fellow prisoner, Rosenthal (David Chandler[disambiguation needed]), conclude that the girl will not be set free after she is forced to watch the executions. After all captives are shot, the girl is allowed to flee toward the main gate of the camp. Before she can run very far, Muhsfeldt draws his handgun and shoots her. The film closes with a voice-over recitation by the dead girl.
[edit] Cast
David Arquette as Hoffman
Steve Buscemi as "Hesch" Abramowics
David Chandler[disambiguation needed] as Rosenthal
Allan Corduner as Dr. Miklós Nyiszli
Daniel Benzali as Schlermer
Mira Sorvino as Dina
Natasha Lyonne as Rosa
Michael Stuhlbarg as Cohen
Harvey Keitel as SS-Oberscharführer Eric Muhsfeldt
Kamelia Grigorova as the Girl
Velizar Binev as SS-Oberscharführer Otto Moll
Lee Wilkof as Man With Watch
[edit] Production and release
The film was based upon Nelson's own play adapted from Nyiszli's book. A 90 percent scale "model" of the Birkenau camp was built near Sofia, Bulgaria for the production of the film using the original architectural plans.
The film was first released on DVD on March 18, 2003. In 2008 it was released on DVD in the UK.
The film received the 2002 National Board of Review Freedom of Expression Award.[2]
[edit] See also
List of Holocaust films
[edit] References
1.^ "The Grey Zone (2002)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved July 6, 2011.
2.^ Newmarket Press web site. Last accessed: February 7, 2011.
[edit] External links
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: The Grey Zone
The Grey Zone at the Internet Movie Database
The Grey Zone at Rotten Tomatoes
The Grey Zone at Box Office Mojo
Films directed by Tim Blake Nelson
1990s
Eye of God (1997)
2000s
O (2001) ·
The Grey Zone (2001) ·
Leaves of Grass (2009)
Categories: 2001 films
English-language films
2000s drama films
American films
American war drama films
Films directed by Tim Blake Nelson
Films set in Poland
Films set in the 1940s
Holocaust films
Films about Jews and Judaism
Lions Gate Entertainment films
Nu Image films
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