IMDb RATING
8.1/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
Tells the story of the Frank family and paints a portrait of their brash and free-spirited daughter Anne, perhaps the world's most famous victim of the Holocaust.Tells the story of the Frank family and paints a portrait of their brash and free-spirited daughter Anne, perhaps the world's most famous victim of the Holocaust.Tells the story of the Frank family and paints a portrait of their brash and free-spirited daughter Anne, perhaps the world's most famous victim of the Holocaust.
- Won 1 Oscar
- 9 wins & 6 nominations total
Kenneth Branagh
- Narration
- (voice)
Glenn Close
- Diary Readings
- (voice)
Rose De Liema
- Self - Westerbork Prisoner Aug
- (as Rose de Liema)
- …
Sal De Liema
- Self - Westerbork Prisoner Aug
- (as Sal de Liema)
- …
Buddy Elias
- Self - Anne's cousin
- (as Bernd Elias)
- …
Bloeme Evers
- Self - Margot's classmate
- (as Bloeme Evers-Emden)
- …
Alice Frank
- Self - Otto's Mother
- (as Alice Frank-Stern)
Anne Frank
- Self
- (archive footage)
Margot Frank
- Self
- (archive footage)
Otto Frank
- Self
- (archive footage)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
The documentary is excellent, except for one element - the narration says "Polish death camps" - once and for all, please get this right - there were NO POLISH death camps! Poland was occupied by Germany and the death camps were German DEATH CAMPS SET UP BY THE Nazis! This is an important piece of history that is surprisingly perpetuated in a variety of printed and film material."Usage of the term has been condemned as insulting by the Polish foreign minister Adam Daniel Rotfeld in 2005, who also alleged that it—intentionally or unintentionally—shifted the responsibility for the construction or operation of the camps from the German to the Polish people." (quoting from Wikipedia) Even Obama had to apologize for using this term as late as May 2012. This wrong term must NOT be used anymore. Death camps were NAZI CAMPS, located in Nazi-occupied Poland!
The first half, that deals with the Frank family hiding in the upper floors of Mr. Frank's business, is very well done but does not really add anything to what we already know, especially if we have seen George Stevens' film or read Anne Frank's diary. It is when this very sobering documentary follows the Franks to the death camps of Auschwitz and Bergen Belsen (just to type the names induces chills) that the film becomes terrifyingly riveting and, for me, eye opening. There is a protective temptation with this particular family to freeze them at that moment when their hiding place is discovered so that they can somehow go from discovery to immortality, without having to undergo the intervening horror. Well, director John Blair will have none of that as he slowly guides us through various Nazi hellscapes to see what befell not only the Franks but millions of Jews, accompanied by stark images of barracks, guard towers and corpses and the calm, somber, and at times devastated voices of the death camp survivors. A quite shattering experience. A minus.
PS...Almost forgot to mention Kenneth Branagh's very good narration, which is serious without being stagey. Only time I've ever liked Branagh.
PS...Almost forgot to mention Kenneth Branagh's very good narration, which is serious without being stagey. Only time I've ever liked Branagh.
10onlyme
As good as Schindler's List was, I found this movie much more powerful as it is a documentary and based on real life. It details the story of the Frank family, and Anne in particular. Although it is a bit slow moving at first (detailing their family life before the war); it becomes very powerful.
Due to some of the footage and photos of the camps, I would not recommend it for children but for adults, it illustrates the horror of the Holocaust through one young girl. Highly recommended.
Due to some of the footage and photos of the camps, I would not recommend it for children but for adults, it illustrates the horror of the Holocaust through one young girl. Highly recommended.
Your comment is completely false, her diary has been proved to be authentic. Don't know why there are people like you who lie and want to say otherwise. Suppose every site has it's trolls and idiots.
Anyway this is a brilliant and moving documentary that should be seen by all. Includes interviews of people that knew Anne Frank and members of her family.
Also try and see the BBC's Diary of Anne Frank which is a brilliant 5 part mini series that follows her time in hiding.
The film Anne Frank: The whole story is quite good too and deals with her life before hiding, during hiding and after capture.
Anyway this is a brilliant and moving documentary that should be seen by all. Includes interviews of people that knew Anne Frank and members of her family.
Also try and see the BBC's Diary of Anne Frank which is a brilliant 5 part mini series that follows her time in hiding.
The film Anne Frank: The whole story is quite good too and deals with her life before hiding, during hiding and after capture.
Through the years I've been very much interested in the life of this teenager who left such a profound, indelible mark on the world. My fascination has also been born of fear, as in, could this happen again.
And throughout the ensuing years, yes, I fear 'it' continues to happen around us and of course 'it' was happening long before Anne. The 'it' of course is can a so-called civilized society turn on its own or on an innocent country/race/continent and murder citizens in cold blood on the flimsiest of excuses? I leave that question out there.
At the beginning of the documentary there is a statement about the leader Adolf Hitler in that the one profound fact about Hitler that is never mentioned was that he was elected democratically and all of the atrocities committed were done as the result of a compliant poodle-press and fear-mongering propaganda played over and over again for a docile population.
One of the atrocities was Anne Frank, who put a face to the death camps by the miracle of her diary's survival.
Kenneth Brannagh does a wonderful job on the commentary and interviewing, he has that rare gift of minimizing his own persona thus allowing the subjects to speak for themselves.
Many new facts and people never before interviewed are brought to life in the meticulous research, which I will not go into here as they add immeasurably to the reality and gut wrenching sorrow of the film.
Glenn Close reads selections from the diary and her voice is perfect for the part, she brings a naiveté and freshness to the role.
Old childhood friends of Anne's are interviewed at length and her last days before death are well recorded and witnessed along with her vibrant and mischievous personality.
This is not to be missed. A wonderful and respectful film about the seldom seen Anne.
10 out of 10.
And throughout the ensuing years, yes, I fear 'it' continues to happen around us and of course 'it' was happening long before Anne. The 'it' of course is can a so-called civilized society turn on its own or on an innocent country/race/continent and murder citizens in cold blood on the flimsiest of excuses? I leave that question out there.
At the beginning of the documentary there is a statement about the leader Adolf Hitler in that the one profound fact about Hitler that is never mentioned was that he was elected democratically and all of the atrocities committed were done as the result of a compliant poodle-press and fear-mongering propaganda played over and over again for a docile population.
One of the atrocities was Anne Frank, who put a face to the death camps by the miracle of her diary's survival.
Kenneth Brannagh does a wonderful job on the commentary and interviewing, he has that rare gift of minimizing his own persona thus allowing the subjects to speak for themselves.
Many new facts and people never before interviewed are brought to life in the meticulous research, which I will not go into here as they add immeasurably to the reality and gut wrenching sorrow of the film.
Glenn Close reads selections from the diary and her voice is perfect for the part, she brings a naiveté and freshness to the role.
Old childhood friends of Anne's are interviewed at length and her last days before death are well recorded and witnessed along with her vibrant and mischievous personality.
This is not to be missed. A wonderful and respectful film about the seldom seen Anne.
10 out of 10.
Did you know
- TriviaAnnelies Marie "Anne" Frank (1929-1945) was a German-Jewish girl from Frankfurt. She moved to the Netherlands in 1934, when only 5 years old. She spent most of her life in Amsterdam. Anne was formally stripped of her German citizenship in 1941, and was never granted Dutch citizenship. For the last years of her life, Anne was legally stateless.
- Quotes
Otto Frank: In fact, I only learned to know her *really* through her diary.
- How long is Anne Frank Remembered?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Recordando a Ana Frank
- Filming locations
- Prinsengracht 263, Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Netherlands(Anne Frank house)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $1,310,200
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $26,697
- Feb 25, 1996
- Gross worldwide
- $1,310,200
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