The Simon Wiesenthal Center's Newest Documentary "I Have NeverForgotten You, The Life and Legacy of Simon Wiesenthal" Premiered as an Official Selection at the 'Berlinale Special' at the "2007 Berlin Film Festival"
...Richard Trank's Berlinale Special documentary, "I Have Never Forgotten You -- The Life and Legacy of SimonWiesenthal," is a moving testament to the late Holocaust survivor and Nazi hunter that will be viewed by generations to come. TheHollywood Reporter February 15, 2007 |
“I Have Never Forgotten You” is a comprehensive look at the life and legacy of Simon Wiesenthal, the famed Nazi hunter andhumanitarian who died in 2005. Narrated by Academy AwardTM winning actress Nicole Kidman, it features interviews with longtime Wiesenthal
The Ukrainian-born Wiesenthal, a secular Jew who survived the Holocaust but lost 89 family members between his wife and himself,devoted more than six decades to the pursuit of Nazi war criminals. An architect, he never returned to his profession after the war. “Who was I going to build houses for?” he asked after so manywere murdered. After witnessing the early efforts of the American Army at the Mauthausen concentration camp, where he was liberated in May of 1945, to bring members of the SS to trial, Wiesenthalrealized what his life’s work would be. “There is no freedom without justice,” he decided. Working first with the Americans, he then established his own organization after the politics of theCold War caused the Allies to lose interest in the issue of prosecuting Nazi war criminals. What was the driving force behind his
Besides helping to prosecute more than 1100 Nazi war criminals, Wiesenthal was among the first to discuss the plight of thegypsies, gays, and others who suffered at the hands of the Nazis. While he became celebrated by many as the “conscience of the Holocaust” there were many controversies in his career, most notablythe Waldheim affair in the 1980’s. “I Have Never Forgotten You” examines the breadth of Wiesenthal’s life--from his childhood in the Ukraine, his experiences during the Holocaust, his struggle tokeep his small office open as he searched for war criminals with almost no staff or budget, the praise as well as the criticism for his work. Finally, the film asks what is his legacy today, morethan 60 years after the end of World War II?
Two of Moriah Films’ previous productions, “Genocide” and “The Long Way Home”, won AcademyAwardsTM for Best Feature Documentary.
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