When Solly and Burger are arguing in their sleeping quarters, Burger pulls down a bunk bed. In the next shot the bed is standing up.
While Sally and Kolya are being transported on a moving train, a German guard is bringing them food. In the camp hierarchy, German guards seldom interacted with prisoners, instead having other prisoners undertake menial tasks of serving food. Prisoners were seldom fed during transport as these cattle-wagons were not inter-connected and most likely locked from outside.
Only prisoners admitted to the Auschwitz concentration camp complex had tattoos placed on their left forearms, but this story doesn't take place there and no other camps employed tattooing. Increasingly, movies, paintings, and other media have used the tattooed arm as a "symbol" of the camps or even the Holocaust itself - despite the historical error. There were two series: A ( up until 20,000 - July 30, 1944), and the B series - starting shortly thereafter. Those selected for the gas chambers after arriving were not included. These numbers were meant to be used as an identification marker at the time of death of the prisoner.
Although the location of the story is Sachsenhausen, prisoners from Auschwitz were also included in the forgery group, so they also wore tattoos on their left forearms.
Although the location of the story is Sachsenhausen, prisoners from Auschwitz were also included in the forgery group, so they also wore tattoos on their left forearms.
When Sorowitsch is walking up the stairs at the beach, you see pigeons flying by, but their call is that of seagulls.