IMDb RATING
7.2/10
1.8K
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While Joseph Goebbels infamously declared Berlin "free of Jews" in 1943, 1,700 managed to survive in the Nazi capital through the end of WWII. The Invisibles traces the stories of four young... Read allWhile Joseph Goebbels infamously declared Berlin "free of Jews" in 1943, 1,700 managed to survive in the Nazi capital through the end of WWII. The Invisibles traces the stories of four young people who learned to hide in plain sight.While Joseph Goebbels infamously declared Berlin "free of Jews" in 1943, 1,700 managed to survive in the Nazi capital through the end of WWII. The Invisibles traces the stories of four young people who learned to hide in plain sight.
- Awards
- 1 win & 3 nominations total
Horst Günter Marx
- Oberst Wehlen
- (as Horst-Günter Marx)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
A German docudrama; A story about young Jewish people who, with ingenuity and emotional strength, and at great risk to themselves, manage to evade Nazi authorities between 1943 and 1945. The film seamlessly combines interviews with live action in an effective way. Technically, it is well-produced too. Although there are some establishing shots between sequences that look a bit amateurish, all in all it is an absorbing story, a true story.
Die Unsichtbaren / The Invisibles (2017)
This film is absolutely unique; it combines interviews with four remarkable Jewish people that, through all odds, managed to survive the Nazi invasions in Berlin along with a feature film type story that depicts these four as youth in 1943, and also includes vintage clips. The interviews are priceless; the actors are engaging and excellent; and each storyline is intriguing on it's own. Although each of the four stories is separate without intersecting with the others, the narrative is captivating and the film flows along and mesmerizes. Die Unsichtbaren depicts the courage, wits, and resistance of both the Jewish survivors and the German citizens who put themselves in harm's way to help them. I highly recommend this film.
This film is absolutely unique; it combines interviews with four remarkable Jewish people that, through all odds, managed to survive the Nazi invasions in Berlin along with a feature film type story that depicts these four as youth in 1943, and also includes vintage clips. The interviews are priceless; the actors are engaging and excellent; and each storyline is intriguing on it's own. Although each of the four stories is separate without intersecting with the others, the narrative is captivating and the film flows along and mesmerizes. Die Unsichtbaren depicts the courage, wits, and resistance of both the Jewish survivors and the German citizens who put themselves in harm's way to help them. I highly recommend this film.
"The Invisibles" is a sanitized version of what could have been an important film about Jews in Berlin who stayed behind and blended in with the rest of the Berliners during WWII. We are told approx. 7,000 Jews evaded capture but that only 1,500 survived to the end of the war. This picture is handsomely produced but is a bloodless rendition of what must have been the case at the time. No violent encounters, no shootings and no sense of the scope of the matter.
The semi-documentary style is distracting, as the actors portray some of the survivors, who are interspersed with the story. Continuity is the casualty as the narrative is repeatedly interrupted to interview those survivors again and again. Well done film that needed some Hollywood 'punch' and some added tension to avoid onscreen blandness.
The semi-documentary style is distracting, as the actors portray some of the survivors, who are interspersed with the story. Continuity is the casualty as the narrative is repeatedly interrupted to interview those survivors again and again. Well done film that needed some Hollywood 'punch' and some added tension to avoid onscreen blandness.
A drama that seamlessly combines interviews with the last living jewish eyewitnesses with recreated film scenes of berlin in the year 1943. In fact this might be one of the last movies with actual contemporary witnesses. Under the many films that cover the holocaust of the jews and more specific the time when jewish people had to live in the shadows, this film is special because the stories of the contemporary witnesses are so moving and astonishing thrilling. A very moving feature with a focus on positive aspects and some of the last good people in the third Reich.
Interesting film telling the story of these terrible times from another perspective, with the heroes being the German people who risked their lives to help many young Jews hide underground in World War 2
Did you know
- TriviaThe interviews with the survivors were conducted in 2009.
- Quotes
Cioma Schönhaus: I am not ready yet. I want to stay here. I want to live.
- ConnectionsFeatures The German Weekly Review (1940)
- SoundtracksSmile
Performed by Steve Martin, Henrik Wikström (as Henrik Wikstrom)
- How long is The Invisibles?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- The Resistance
- Filming locations
- Wrisbergholzen, Lower Saxony, Germany(location)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $407,373
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $27,164
- Jan 27, 2019
- Gross worldwide
- $1,224,098
- Runtime
- 1h 50m(110 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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