The best Claude Lanzmann’s movies

Claude Lanzmann

Claude Lanzmann

27/11/1925- 05/07/2018
Today we present the best Claude Lanzmann’s movies. If you are a great movie fan, you will surely know most of them, but we hope to discover a movie that you have not yet seen … and that you love! Let’s go there with the best Claude Lanzmann’s movies.

Shoah

Shoah
8.7/10
Claude Lanzmann directed this 9½ hour documentary on the Holocaust without using a single frame of archive footage. He interviews survivors, witnesses, and ex-Nazis (whom he had to film secretly since they only agreed to be interviewed by audio). His style of interviewing, by asking for the most minute details, is effective at adding up these details to give a horrifying portrait of the events of Nazi genocide. He also shows, or rather lets some of his subjects show, that the anti-Semitism that caused 6 million Jews to die in the Holocaust is still alive and well in many people who still live in Germany, Poland, and elsewhere.

Hôtel Terminus: The Life and Times of Klaus Barbie

Hôtel Terminus: The Life and Times of Klaus Barbie
7.6/10
Winner of a Best Documentary Academy Award, Marcel Ophuls' riveting film details the heinous legacy of the Gestapo head dubbed "The Butcher of Lyon." Responsible for over 4,000 deaths in occupied France during World War II, Barbie would escape--with U.S. help--to South America in 1951, where he lived until a global manhunt led to his 1983 arrest and subsequent trial.

The Last of the Unjust

The Last of the Unjust
7.3/10
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release: 13/11/2013
  • Character: Himself
A place: Theresienstadt. A unique place of propaganda which Adolf Eichmann called the "model ghetto", designed to mislead the world and Jewish people regarding its real nature, to be the last step before the gas chamber. A man: Benjamin Murmelstein, last president of the Theresienstadt Jewish Council, a fallen hero condemned to exile, who was forced to negotiate day after day from 1938 until the end of the war with Eichmann, to whose trial Murmelstein wasn't even called to testify. Even though he was without a doubt the one who knew the Nazi executioner best. More than twenty-five years after Shoah, Claude Lanzmann's new film reveals a little-known yet fundamental aspect of the Holocaust, and sheds light on the origins of the "Final Solution" like never before.

The Clown

The Clown
7.9/10
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release: 03/02/2016
  • Character: Self
A documentary directed by Eric Friedler about Jerry Lewis' never released movie "The Day The Clown Cried".

Sobibor, October 14, 1943, 4 p.m.

Sobibor, October 14, 1943, 4 p.m.
7.4/10
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release: 13/05/2001
  • Character: Himself - Interviewer
A Claude Lanzmann documentary about one uprising by Jews in a Nazi-run concentration camp taken from his Shoah interviews.

Israel, Why

Israel, Why
7.9/10
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release: 01/10/1973
  • Character: Himself
Using interviews and other footage shot especially for this documentary, French director Claude Lanzmann investigates the state of Israel in 1972. This movie concentrates on Israelis going about their business of everyday living.

We Shall Not Die Now

We Shall Not Die Now
8/10
A chronicle of the Holocaust, told by the resilient survivors who lived through it.

Napalm

Napalm
5.5/10
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release: 06/09/2017
  • Character: Himself
Napalm is the story of the breathtaking and brief encounter, in 1958, between a French member of the first Western European delegation officially invited to North Korea after the devastating Korean war and a nurse working for the Korean Red Cross hospital, in Pyongyang, capital of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

The Karski Report

The Karski Report
7.3/10
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release: 17/03/2010
  • Character: Himself
A powerful new film about Jan Karski, the Polish resistance figure who attempted to expose the Warsaw Ghetto and Belzec, and met with President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter.

Claude Lanzmann: Spectres of the Shoah

Claude Lanzmann: Spectres of the Shoah
6.8/10
The process of making Shoah.

A Philosopher in the Arena

A Philosopher in the Arena
8/10
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release: 01/02/2019
  • Character: Claude Lanzmann
After his retirement, french philosopher and bullfighting enthusiast Francis Wolff decides to embark on a journey to France, Spain and Mexico joined by two mexican filmmakers who hardly know anything about bullfighting, a culture whose days seem to be numbered. During their road trip, they encounter numerous personalities with whom they reflect on mankind’s relationship with animals and nature, but most importantly on our relationship with death and the meaning of the ultimate journey: life itself.

Shoah: Four Sisters

Shoah: Four Sisters
8.2/10
Since 1999, Claude Lanzmann has made several films that could be considered satellites of Shoah, comprised of interviews conducted in the 1970s that didn’t make it into the final, monumental work. He has just completed a series of four new films, built around four women from four different areas of Eastern Europe with four different destinies, each finding herself unexpectedly and improbably alive after war’s end.

A Visitor from the Living

A Visitor from the Living
7.5/10
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release: 26/07/1999
  • Character: Himself
An interview with a WWII Red Cross official who wrote a glowing report on a Jewish ghetto-cum-death camp.

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