The story of Raoul Wallenberg, a Swedish diplomat responsible for saving thousands of lives from the Nazi Holocaust.The story of Raoul Wallenberg, a Swedish diplomat responsible for saving thousands of lives from the Nazi Holocaust.The story of Raoul Wallenberg, a Swedish diplomat responsible for saving thousands of lives from the Nazi Holocaust.
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- Won 4 Primetime Emmys
- 7 wins & 10 nominations total
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I am intrigued by one viewer's comments that this movie inspired controversy. Chamberlain is retired but surely he doesn't regret this effort. He did an outstanding job.
I made my kids watch this when it was on AMC once---surely someone can take this video and cut some DVDs.
I'm amazed that the Holocaust museums and the different Wallenberg foundations and related organizations don't have this for sale as an educational vehicle.
Chamberlain plays the eponymous real-life hero, who disappeared in 1947. No one is sure when he died.
The film shows Wallenberg's tireless work to save Jews while holding the position of Sweden's special envoy in Budapest between July and December 1944. The Nazis called it "turning Jews into Swedes" because he issued "protective passports" that identified the carrier as a Swedish subject. He housed Jews in rented buildings.
The movie has a quasi romance between Wallenberg and Baroness Elisabeth Kemeny (Alice Krige) which was probably false. However, she believed in Wallenberg's work and was instrumental in encouraging her husband, the Hungarian minister for Foreign Affairs to have travel passes honored when the Germans declared them invalid.
Any film showing the plight of the Jews is harrowing and tragic. This is no different, with dialogue from Eichmann (Kenneth Koley) and others showing their contempt and inhumanity.
In Chamberlain's earnest portrayal, he exhibits no understanding of such cruelty, and his attempts to reason with the Germans leave him baffled. They think nothing of exterminating Jews, even young children.
Sadly I was reminded of today, when some people are lumped together in one group and no longer thought of as human beings. What emerged for me was the despair that we've learned nothing.
My only problem was all the accents. When your in a foreign country, you don't walk around speaking English with a foreign accent. You speak your own language. Though this was set in different places, Wallenberg understood other languages, and would have been speaking in them. Accents are not necessary. Otherwise, Romeo and Juliet would be speaking with Italian accents.
A compelling, thought-provoking film, with a strong performance by Chamberlain as a righteous among nations.
Like many others I was impressed and moved by this presentation. Though there are other productions about Wallenberg, I think this one is unmatched.
I too searched over the years in vain for a copy of the miniseries. I do not believe it is available commercially.
Nevertheless, after considerable and time consuming effort, I have been able to obtain a copy of the whole miniseries.
It was recorded on 4 CD-R disks and subsequently transferred to a single DVD disk.
The video an audio are good.
It is comparable to a good VHS recording.
Let me know if you are interested.
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Did you know
- GoofsAlthough Admiral Miklós Horthy is depicted as having a beard, he was clean shaven throughout his life in reality.
- Quotes
Narrator: Here on the outskirts of Jerusalem, there is a place known as the Mount of Remembrance. Each tree along its avenue of the righteous honors another gentile. Men and Women who risked their own lives to save a Jew's during the Holocaust. The accompanying medal to each honoree, some living, others no longer, bears and inscription: Whoever saves a single soul, it is as if he had saved the whole world. Although their is no order of precedence along this path, it is generally acknowledged that the man whose name is on this plaque
[Raoul Wallenberg]
Narrator: heroically earned this honor through the courage and passion of his life.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 37th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1985)
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