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The Pianist on DVD (2002)

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Average rating: 79%
111115920912
4.0
from 7,251 members
 
Starring: Adrien Brody, Thomas Kretschmann, Frank Finlay, Maureen Lipman, Emilia Fox, Ed Stoppard, Julia Rayner, Jessica Kate Meyer
Director: Roman Polanski
Studio: STUDIO CANAL
Run time: 143 mins
Certificate: 15
User collections: Euro 2008 Countries on Film, Zobo, The Great Films of the Noughties, The finest films ever made, Top Ten War films you may not have seen, Modern War Films, some must see films!, 1001 Movies YMSBYD Part 10, 10 simply great films, Palme d'Or Winners
Genres: Drama
Languages: English
Hearing-impaired: English
Subtitles: English
Released: 21/07/2003
Also Available on:  Also Available on: HD-DVD

Brief synopsis of The Pianist

Wladyslaw Szpilman, a Jewish gifted classical pianist living in Poland during the Nazi occupation manages to escape deportation to a concentration camp and goes into hiding. For the next few years Wladyslaw eludes capture and lives in the ruins of the Warsaw ghetto.

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Wladyslaw Szpilman, a Jewish gifted classical pianist living in Poland during the Nazi occupation manages to e...
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Critics Reviews

Rating of 4 stars out of 5 Radio Times

Roman Polanski laid some personal ghosts to rest with this poignant Holocaust drama based on the memoirs of survivor Wladyslaw Szpilman, and won an Oscar as best director in the process. Evoking his own childhood experiences in the Krakow ghetto, this emotionally and visually compelling triumph stands as a companion piece to Schindler's List. As with Spielberg's masterpiece, Polanski's authentic and objective depiction of the Jewish experience in Nazi-occupied Poland underscores the depth and sophistication of his talent. Events are seen through the eyes of Szpilman (Adrien Brody), a Jewish concert pianist who escaped the Warsaw ghetto as deportations to the death camps began, but witnessed its systematic destruction while in hiding. Although Brody never quite gets under Szpilman's skin, his performance remains admirable, and he was rewarded with a best actor Oscar. But the power of this film lies in Polanski's disciplined style, combined with his stunning attention to detail. By avoiding the simplistic and manipulative clichés of good and evil usually found in Holocaust films, Polanski has added a new layer of understanding to the cinematic depictions of the period.

Rating of 3 
	  stars out of 4 Halliwell's Film Guide

A moving, dispassionate account of survival, based on a true story, and told in the style of 1950s war movie with often searing imagery. It becomes digressive and over-long, but still retains a haunting power.

Time Out

An adaptation of concert pianist Wladyslaw Szpilman's memoirs about his experiences in Nazi-occupied Warsaw, Polanski's... Read more on www.timeout.com

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Members Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 5 starsA Must-Watch film about the horrors of the Holocaust: Polanski and Brody at their best.

A customer from London , 22/10/2003

Wladyslaw Szpilman (Adrien Brody) plays piano on a Warsaw radio station when the Nazis move in to occupy the town. Slowly but systematically, he, his family, and the rest of the Jewish population in the city are separated from the rest of Warsaw. To begin with it is marginalisation: forced to give up their possessions and homes and move to a different part of the city. This leads to beatings, torture, and eventually murder and the indiscriminate extermination of the Polish Jews. In a twist of fate, Szpilman is given the opportunity to escape, leaving the rest of his family and friends to be shipped off to concentration camps and certain death.

As lead, Brody is exceptional. His struggle for survival (based largely upon director Polanski's own experiences) is believable, particularly in the daily detail. The execution of the film is fantastic: Polanski's reliance on action rather than dialogue humbles Brody from film hero to the ordinary man Szpilman really was, and the atmosphere of the film is Polanksi at his best.

A sometimes harrowing film, the movie contains frequent scenes that are disturbing. However, the skill with which the enormity of the Holocaust is brought home through one individual's moving yet trivial life, makes this a must-watch.

  76 out of 84 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 5 starsFantastic!

jaks from london , 16/04/2004

This film deserves to be seen more than once. I was totally gripped and didn’t want it to end. The story sweeps you along and by the end of the film you have a mixture of emotions flying around. Truly a film that deserved more recognition than it did.

  25 out of 25 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 5 starsShockingly Beautiful

Gromit Gromit from Canterbury , 05/04/2006

This film should be at the top of your list if you are looking for a film about World War 2, The Holocaust or even Polish History. Centred around a jewish man's journey through WW2 in Nazi-occupied Warsaw, this film documents the attrocities of war as you've never seen them. Its difficult to watch, but you must. Rent it alongside a comedy so you have something to cheer you up afterwards. This is an absolute must see movie.

  16 out of 16 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 5 starsVery moving film

nickelbackjunky from Staffordshire , 04/03/2004

This is a film that you will want to watch to the end. I started to watch it on the plane back from America but because I had watched 2 other films before it, was unable to see it all - therefore I just had to rent it when I got back. Glad I did! It's not the normal Jewish concentration camp film, so don't think that if you've seen one Jewish / Nazi film you've seen them all.

  15 out of 16 people found this review helpful
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Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 5 starsA Must-Watch film about the horrors of the Holocaust: Polanski and Brody at their best.

A customer from London , 22/10/2003

Wladyslaw Szpilman (Adrien Brody) plays piano on a Warsaw radio station when the Nazis move in to occupy the town. Slowly but systematically, he, his family, and the rest of the Jewish population in the city are separated from the rest of Warsaw. To begin with it is marginalisation: forced to give up their possessions and homes and move to a different part of the city. This leads to beatings, torture, and eventually murder and the indiscriminate extermination of the Polish Jews. In a twist of fate, Szpilman is given the opportunity to escape, leaving the rest of his family and friends to be shipped off to concentration camps and certain death.

As lead, Brody is exceptional. His struggle for survival (based largely upon director Polanski's own experiences) is believable, particularly in the daily detail. The execution of the film is fantastic: Polanski's reliance on action rather than dialogue humbles Brody from film hero to the ordinary man Szpilman really was, and the atmosphere of the film is Polanksi at his best.

A sometimes harrowing film, the movie contains frequent scenes that are disturbing. However, the skill with which the enormity of the Holocaust is brought home through one individual's moving yet trivial life, makes this a must-watch.

  76 out of 84 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 4 starsVery good, very graphic.

A customer from London , 22/04/2005

Obviously, I'm aware that this film is supposed to show people the awful reality of the persecution of the Jews during WWII. Even so, this film pulls no punches and depicts some of the most horrific scenes in movie history.

Where other films would cut the camera and leave the rest to our imagination, this one doesn't, and some of the images are extremely graphic and disturbing. I'm not saying that a film on this subject matter should necessarily pull its punches, but be warned before you watch it.

Having said that, it is a powerful, well made, very well acted (Adrien Brody does an excellent job alongside other fine actors), and beautifully shot, but it's not a light-hearted Saturday night movie.

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful
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