Shanghai Ghetto (2002)
Facts
| Directed by | Dana Janklowicz-Mann and Amir Mann |
| Cast | Martin Landau, David Kranzler, Buzeng Xu, I. Betty Grebenschikoff and Harold Janklowicz |
| Theatrical Release | November 30, 2001 |
| DVD Release | January 25, 2005 |
| Running Time | 95 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | NR (Not Rated) |
| UPC Code | 767685969533 |
| Buy this item | $14.99 at Amazon.com As of Oct 12 15:20 EDT (details) 1 DVD, New Video Group, Usually ships in 24 hours, Black & White, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Subtitled, NTSC Languages: English (Subtitled), English (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo), German (Original Language) Or 25 new from $14.98, 8 used from $13.90 |
About Shanghai Ghetto
One of the most amazing and captivating survival tales of WWII, the overwhelmingly acclaimed SHANGHAI GHETTO has been declared "a don’t miss documentary...powerful...eye-opening" (New York Observer). Stirringly narrated by Academy Award winner Martin Landau (Ed Wood, The Majestic), SHANGHAI GHETTO recalls the strange-but-true story of thousands of European Jews who were shut out of country after country while trying to escape Nazi persecution in the late 1930s. Left without options or entrance visas, a beacon of hope materialized for them on the other side of the world, and in the unlikeliest of places, Japanese-controlled Shanghai. Fleeing for their lives, these Jewish refugees journeyed to form a settlement in the exotic city, penniless and unprepared for their new life in the Far East. At the turn of the new millennium, filmmakers Dana Janklowicz-Mann and Amire Mann boldly snuck into China with two survivors and a digital camera to shoot at the site of the original Shanghai Ghetto, unchanged since WWII. Their never-before-seen recordings--along with interviews of survivors and historians, rare letters, stock footage, still photos, and an orignal score by Sujin Nam and Chinese Erhu performer Karen Han (Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon)--depicts an incredibly moving portrayal of a rich cultural life, bravely constructed under enormous hardship. DVD Features: Filmmaker Commentary; Deleted Interviews; Hebrew/English Subtitles; Theatrical Trailer; Filmmaker Biographies; Interactive Menus; Scene Selection
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User Reviews
Average user review:| WW II Jews as Shanghai neighbors |
The Chinese Consul General in Austria, Feng-shan Ho issued over twenty thousand visas for Jews to flee to Shanghai China. This film tells personal stories of the Jews who valued and treasured this survival experience in an alien land of culture in "among all four seas are brothers and sisters" in practicing "love your neighbors as yourself". Jewish people whether long time settlers of Kaifeng or in 1930s Shanghai never have to worry about anti-Semitism. It was wonderful to hear the Shanghai Ghetto Jews told their stories and returned for home coming. I met a few Shanghai Jews who shared their story, family history and personal belongings in St Louis Holocaust Museum and Learning Center. I had the honor to attend this film premier show with them.
This film reminded that Jews in Europe under Nazi Germany and Chinese in Asia under Imperial Japan suffered heavily in WW II. Germany did the right thing to close the history chapter by apology and compensation with education for the younger generation. However, her Asian Ally - Japan does not have the moral courage to show remorse with attrition. Instead, they systematically worship at the Tokyo Yasukuni Shrine where housed the convicted Class A War Criminals in an attempt to resurrect militarism besides whitewash, distort and deny their aggressive war crimes in slave labor, comfort women, germ/chemical warfare, and massacres.
This film reaffirms the friendship between Jewish and Chinese peoples in difficult war time with mutual support. By working together with people of peace with justice, we will keep vigilant in preventing the horror of crime against humanity from happening again.
August 21, 2008
| fascinating history, compelling stories |
| A must see! |
| worth watching |
| "Shanghai Ghetto" and "Ten Green Bottles" - Amazing Combination |
"Ten Green Bottles" is a beautifully written story about a Jewish family who lived in their highly cultured city of Vienna until the Nazi's came and were barely able to escape to Shanghai. There they tried to survive under Japanese occupation and amid a city of both unbelievable poverty for most and unbelievable wealth for the privileged few. The book is written in the literary non-fiction genre with dialog and in the first person of the heroine, the author's mother, so that you experience her life in Vienna and Shanghai as if you were in her skin. When the old movie footage and pictures, recent interviews and visit to Shanghai of the people of the video "Shanghai Ghetto" were added to this, it made you feel as if you had experienced all of what we had read and saw as if we were actually there.
It was a truly amazing combination. May 2, 2007
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