Bird Street Island

Søren Kragh-Jacobsen
Simon Gregor, Jordan Kizzee, Patrick Bokin, James Brolin
1997
Denmark, UK, Germany
Completed
English, German, Latin
107 minutes
Detailed introduction
This film (drama)Also known asThe Island on Bird Street,is aDenmark, UK, GermanyProducerwomen sex,At1997Released in year
。The dialogue language isEnglish, German, Latin,Current Douban rating8.2(For reference only)。
During World War II, in an abandoned factory within a walled Jewish ghetto, the Jews inside lived and worked in fear, their numbers dwindling as the Nazis periodically came in to take some away—first women and children, then the elderly, and eventually all of them, with an obvious fate awaiting them. During one raid, a father wanted his father and son to escape and prepared to fight the Nazis, but due to a betrayal, it failed. At that moment, the grandfather selflessly stepped forward to save his grandson, allowing the little boy to temporarily evade disaster, and all that remained of the grandfather was a hat left on the street. The young boy firmly believed that his father would return for him, and he held his ground in the abandoned factory, accompanied only by a little white mouse. When pushed to the limits of survival, humans can unleash unimaginable abilities and wisdom. While watching the film, I was constantly worried for the little boy, with no food, no water, and needing to avoid the Nazis as well as the remaining desperate Jews driven to kill for survival. Yet he endured, even creating his own "treehouse" like Robinson, where from a high corner he observed the "peaceful" world outside through a small window and a telescope…