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7,0/10
7,2 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaPenetrating the insular world of New York's Hasidic community, focusing on three individuals driven to break away despite threats of retaliation.Penetrating the insular world of New York's Hasidic community, focusing on three individuals driven to break away despite threats of retaliation.Penetrating the insular world of New York's Hasidic community, focusing on three individuals driven to break away despite threats of retaliation.
- Prêmios
- 2 vitórias e 5 indicações no total
Avaliações em destaque
10jahaugh
I just want to say first and foremost that I am in awe of the three featured individuals. Etty, Luzer, and Arye/Ari are former members of Brooklyn's Hasidic Jewish community who, for various reasons, and out of varying degrees of excruciating horror or sadness, have chosen to leave the only community they've ever known—a community that eschews formal education, job skill-building, or co-mingling with a 21st-century secular world. In effect, by choosing to use the Internet or eat cheeseburgers or enter a public library, formerly Hasidic Jews in New York face complete isolation and ostracism.
All three stories are heartbreaking in their own ways, and each person was heroic in their willingness to challenge and question a system that does not celebrate America's "rugged individualism." It's no doubt hard for many of us in the secular world to grasp just how complicated it may be to confront such a world. But the real heroism is within Etty, an extraordinarily articulate woman with such steely resolve and fierce affection for her seven children by an abusive husband she barely knew before marrying. It's a mystery how she became so strong, especially given what happens during the course of the film, but she deserves a standing ovation for never losing sight of her principles and her humanity.
Beautifully shot and scored, this film is a thoughtfully constructed and deeply humane exploration of the role of the American Hasidic community in the wake of the Holocaust. I hope there is a follow-up film from the same creators.
All three stories are heartbreaking in their own ways, and each person was heroic in their willingness to challenge and question a system that does not celebrate America's "rugged individualism." It's no doubt hard for many of us in the secular world to grasp just how complicated it may be to confront such a world. But the real heroism is within Etty, an extraordinarily articulate woman with such steely resolve and fierce affection for her seven children by an abusive husband she barely knew before marrying. It's a mystery how she became so strong, especially given what happens during the course of the film, but she deserves a standing ovation for never losing sight of her principles and her humanity.
Beautifully shot and scored, this film is a thoughtfully constructed and deeply humane exploration of the role of the American Hasidic community in the wake of the Holocaust. I hope there is a follow-up film from the same creators.
Firstly, this documentary had excellent music in it... I grew up in a Pentecostal Christian Church which is kind of the equivalent of Hasidism. I know EXACTLY what these people are going through and their stories need to be told. This documentary captures the lack of humanity when an insulated community isolates people who break their rules.
This documentary was life changing for me. It made me realize how lucky I am to be free of a world that made me so sad.
And how easy I had it compared to others who left religion.
Seeing the violence inflicted on Etty made me sick to my stomach.
Seeing the community be willing to give her kids to a man who beat them because better they be battered religiously than be secular made me sick.
Seeing the blacked out faces of little girls made me nauseous.
Hearing how she was stalked and assaulted and how the community spied on her and ruined her life made me hatefully angry.
Honestly, I can't believe we allow this in the US. We shouldn't.
All religious communities need sunlight like this, this movie is a wake up call and worth seeing by everyone, but especially members of the community who need to clean up what is happening.
And how easy I had it compared to others who left religion.
Seeing the violence inflicted on Etty made me sick to my stomach.
Seeing the community be willing to give her kids to a man who beat them because better they be battered religiously than be secular made me sick.
Seeing the blacked out faces of little girls made me nauseous.
Hearing how she was stalked and assaulted and how the community spied on her and ruined her life made me hatefully angry.
Honestly, I can't believe we allow this in the US. We shouldn't.
All religious communities need sunlight like this, this movie is a wake up call and worth seeing by everyone, but especially members of the community who need to clean up what is happening.
A powerful and personal portrait of ostracism from a community. The documentary itself is a standard format but it's what it reveals about the inner workings of a defensive an insular group that is so affecting. No matter the reason or history I can't agree with how Ety was treated by those she used to belong to.
This documentary made me furious! And incredibly sad that in this day and age the men of this religion are so protected and the women are just incubators.
Disturbing and harrowing, especially the complete failure to address child sexual abuse.
Disturbing and harrowing, especially the complete failure to address child sexual abuse.
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Detalhes
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 35 min(95 min)
- Cor
- Proporção
- 16:9 HD
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