The Pianist, the Roman Polanski directed World War 2 movie is on Netflix, and now I've seen it.
It's a fine movie, based on the true story which Wikipedia makes it easy to compare with the screenplay. (You know I always like looking up where such movies diverge from the real story.)
It would seem that the movie is quite close to the book, with relatively few embellishments.
I am curious as to why the movie underplays Szpilman's suicidal thoughts while living in permanent hiding for a couple of years. Indeed, the movie certainly offers no internal thoughts of the main character at all - which makes for a kind of realism but does make it very emotionally cool in most respects. Don't get me wrong - the depiction of casual cruelty by Nazis to Jews is just about as effective as that in Schindler's List - but I guess I still feel it's a pity there was no way devised to give us any of Szpilman's internal dialogue.
The comparison with Spielberg's film is inevitable. Of course, List is often criticised for its made up ending (in which Schindler has an emotional breakdown), and I have always felt this was fair enough (the criticism). But even without that, it is a more emotional (and devastating) film. Its most famous scene (the lost little red-dressed girl) was highly emotional but, importantly, made sense of Schindler's motivation. I presume it was an invention too, but one that worked completely convincingly, unlike the final scene with him.
So it's interesting - both films have an "issue" with emotion - just from the opposite direction.
But both are very good. (I don't think Schindler's List will ever be beaten as the definitive film of the Holocaust, despite the issue discussed herein.)
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