6 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- World War 2 love story and psychological drama., 9 March 2002
Author:
ebbets-field from Seattle
A love story, wartime thriller, and social commentary set during the Nazi
occupation of Czechoslovakia. Artfully shot in black and white, and
undergirded by a strong musical track, it explores the risks of sheltering
a
Jewish fugitive whose a life might be saved (or might not), but where the
lives of many bystanders are thereby put in peril.
Fritz Lang's earlier US-made "Hangmen Also Die" dealt with the same
historical event (the assassination of occupation head Gen. Heydrich), but
his was a more kinetic and extroverted treatment compared to Weiss' more
personal, introspective, and poetic view. In a sense, this is the Anne
Frank story moved from Amsterdam to Prague.
Beautifully-told tragedy, 8 March 2008
Author:
Auteurist-en-Ecosse from Scotland, United Kingdom
Jiri Weiss's 1960 film Romeo, Juliet and Darkness is a wholly
convincing, tightly controlled account of the human costs of despotism.
The story takes place against the background of the Nazi occupation of
Prague, and more specifically the horrible repercussions visited upon
the population after the assassination of Heydrich, the leading Nazi in
Czechoslovakia. A young man, in his final year at school, takes in and
shelters in the attic of his mother's house a Jewish girl of the same
age, going to great pains both to conceal her presence and to find food
for her. Weiss's direction is superb, with particularly good
establishment of the atmosphere of the flats where most of the action
occurs. Watching the move now, one almost feels one is present in the
Prague of 1942, the movie being particularly effective at showing how
routine life goes on under even the most harsh of political
circumstances. The two young actors in the lead roles both give
excellent and very moving performances. There are also a range of
vividly-drawn characters in the background. At least two things make
the film noteworthy, looking at it from today's perspective. First, the
film is almost wholly free of any propagandistic elements, presumably
quite an achievement given the time and place of its production. The
film, with its emphasis on a humanistic depiction on the trials of
ordinary people, points towards the Czech New Wave films which would
appear five or six years later. Second, Weiss's direction is such that
the film is simultaneously vivid and yet understated, the relative
absence of histrionics making it all the more absorbing. The denouement
is very powerful indeed, making the film (available on DVD in the UK)
one that is very worthwhile seeking out. I bought the DVD not knowing
what to expect; I ended up watching a masterpiece.
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6 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :-

World War 2 love story and psychological drama., 9 March 2002
Author: ebbets-field from Seattle
A love story, wartime thriller, and social commentary set during the Nazi occupation of Czechoslovakia. Artfully shot in black and white, and undergirded by a strong musical track, it explores the risks of sheltering a Jewish fugitive whose a life might be saved (or might not), but where the lives of many bystanders are thereby put in peril.
Fritz Lang's earlier US-made "Hangmen Also Die" dealt with the same historical event (the assassination of occupation head Gen. Heydrich), but his was a more kinetic and extroverted treatment compared to Weiss' more personal, introspective, and poetic view. In a sense, this is the Anne Frank story moved from Amsterdam to Prague.
Beautifully-told tragedy, 8 March 2008

Author: Auteurist-en-Ecosse from Scotland, United Kingdom
Jiri Weiss's 1960 film Romeo, Juliet and Darkness is a wholly convincing, tightly controlled account of the human costs of despotism. The story takes place against the background of the Nazi occupation of Prague, and more specifically the horrible repercussions visited upon the population after the assassination of Heydrich, the leading Nazi in Czechoslovakia. A young man, in his final year at school, takes in and shelters in the attic of his mother's house a Jewish girl of the same age, going to great pains both to conceal her presence and to find food for her. Weiss's direction is superb, with particularly good establishment of the atmosphere of the flats where most of the action occurs. Watching the move now, one almost feels one is present in the Prague of 1942, the movie being particularly effective at showing how routine life goes on under even the most harsh of political circumstances. The two young actors in the lead roles both give excellent and very moving performances. There are also a range of vividly-drawn characters in the background. At least two things make the film noteworthy, looking at it from today's perspective. First, the film is almost wholly free of any propagandistic elements, presumably quite an achievement given the time and place of its production. The film, with its emphasis on a humanistic depiction on the trials of ordinary people, points towards the Czech New Wave films which would appear five or six years later. Second, Weiss's direction is such that the film is simultaneously vivid and yet understated, the relative absence of histrionics making it all the more absorbing. The denouement is very powerful indeed, making the film (available on DVD in the UK) one that is very worthwhile seeking out. I bought the DVD not knowing what to expect; I ended up watching a masterpiece.
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