Genocide (1981 film)
Genocide is a 1981 American documentary by Arnold Schwartzman[6][7]
Genocide | |
---|---|
Directed by | Arnold Schwartzman |
Produced by | Rabbi Marvin Hier Arnold Schwartzman[1] Marvin Segelman Peter Shillingford |
Written by | Martin Gilbert Marvin Hier Arnold Schwartzman[2] |
Narrated by | Elizabeth Taylor Orson Welles[3] |
Music by | Elmer Bernstein[4][5] |
Cinematography | Peter Shillingford |
Edited by | Bob Jenkis |
Production company | Moriah Films |
Distributed by | Moriah Films |
Release date | 1981 |
Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Summary
The film documents the history of the Holocaust and the reminiscences of those who survived it in support of the fact that, as one of the survivors stated, it can happen again with the rise of anti-Semitism.[8][9][10]
Accolades
It won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature,[11] the first Holocaust film to win such an honor.[12]
gollark: Although that's kind of contradictory depending on what you're defining "bad" based on.
gollark: Well, you totally could, and that goes against the ethical frameworks most people agree with.
gollark: ...
gollark: So it had some positive effects, doesn't make it good on net.
gollark: Yes, which is bad.
See also
References
- Documentary Winners: 1982 Oscars
- FilmAffinity
- TCM.com
- Genocide - Elmer Bernstein|AllMusic
- GENOCIDE - Intrada
- "Arnold Schwartzman, OBE, Filmmaker, Designer, Author". CTC. Archived from the original on 2013-01-20. Retrieved 2008-11-16.
- BFI
- WorldCat.org
- 'GENOCIDE', VIEW OF HOLOCAUST - New York Times
- Cinema: Hell Enough - TIME
- 1982|Oscars.org
- Genocide - Trailer - YouTube
External links
- Genocide on IMDb
- Genocide at Moriah Films
- Emanuel Levy's review of the 1981 Oscar-winning documentary film
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