The film opens with on-screen text stating: "A true
story". It is August 1941, and Nazi Einsatz-Gruppen (task forces)
are sweeping through Eastern Europe, systematically killing Jews. Among
the survivors not killed or restricted to ghettoes are
the Polish Jewish Bielski brothers: Tuvia (Daniel
Craig), Zus (Liev
Schreiber), Asael (Jamie Bell)
and Aron (George MacKay). Their parents are dead, slain
by the local police under orders from the occupying Germans. The brothers
flee to the Naliboki Forest, vowing to avenge their parents.
They encounter other Jewish escapees hiding in the forest,
and the brothers take them under their protection and leadership. Over the next
year, they shelter a growing number of refugees, raiding local farms for food
and supplies and moving their camp whenever they are discovered by the
collaborating police. Tuvia kills the local Auxiliary
Police chief responsible for his parents' deaths, and the brothers
stage raids on the Germans and their collaborators.
However, Jewish casualties cause Tuvia to reconsider this approach because of
the resulting risk to the hiding Jews. A long-time sibling rivalry between the
two eldest brothers, Tuvia and Zus, fuels a disagreement between them about
their future: as winter approaches, Zus elects to leave his brothers and the
camp and join a local company of Soviet
partisans, while his older brother Tuvia remains with the camp as their
leader. An arrangement is made between the two groups in which the Soviet
partisans agree to protect the Jewish camp in exchange for supplies.
After a winter of sickness, starvation, attempted betrayal,
and constant hiding, the camp learns that the Germans are about to attack them
in force. The Soviets refuse to help them, and they evacuate the camp as German
dive-bombers strike. A delaying force stays behind, led by Asael, to slow down
the German ground troops. The defense does not last long; only Asael and a camp
member named Sofiya survive to rejoin the rest of the group, who, at the edge
of the forest, are confronted with a seemingly impassable marsh. They cross the
marsh with only one casualty, but are immediately attacked by a German platoon supported
by a Panzer
III infantry tank. Just as all seems lost, the Germans
are assaulted from the rear by a partisan force led by Zus, which has
apparently deserted the Soviet retreat to rejoin the group.
As the survivors escape into the forest, the film ends as
on-screen text states that they lived in the forest for another two years,
building a hospital, a nursery and a school, and ultimately growing to a total
of 1,200 Jews. Original photographs of the real-life characters are shown,
including Tuvia in his Polish Army uniform, and their ultimate fates are
shared: Asael joined the Soviet
Army and was soon killed in action, never getting to see the child he
fathered; and Tuvia, Zus and Aron survived the war and emigrated to America to
form a successful trucking firm in New
York City. The epilogue also states that the Bielski brothers never sought
recognition for what they did, and that the descendants of the people they
saved now number in the tens of thousands.
Untuk pinjaman dan rujukan bahan:
Unit Sumber Media,
Perbadanan Perpustakaan Awam Negeri Perlis
Jln Penjara, 01000
Kangar, Perlis
Tel : 04 : 9764436
Faks : 04 : 9760906
Email : unitsumbermedia@gmail.com
Jenis bahan :
DVDUntuk pinjaman dan rujukan bahan:
Unit Sumber Media,
Perbadanan Perpustakaan Awam Negeri Perlis
Jln Penjara, 01000
Kangar, Perlis
Tel : 04 : 9764436
Faks : 04 : 9760906
Email : unitsumbermedia@gmail.com
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