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Diamonds of the Night DVD [Region 2] - Classic European Cinema for Movie Collectors & Film Enthusiasts
Diamonds of the Night DVD [Region 2] - Classic European Cinema for Movie Collectors & Film Enthusiasts
Diamonds of the Night DVD [Region 2] - Classic European Cinema for Movie Collectors & Film Enthusiasts

Diamonds of the Night DVD [Region 2] - Classic European Cinema for Movie Collectors & Film Enthusiasts

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Description

Jan Nemec's debut feature, Diamonds of the Night, is one of the most thrilling and startlingly original works of cinema. Told almost without dialogue, it chronicles the tense and desperate journey of two teenage boys who are trying to stay alive after escaping from a German train bound for a Nazi concentration camp during World War II. With its virtuoso cinematography, inspired edition and brilliantly utilized sound track, the film is a landmark of the ill-fated Czech New Wave. Its themes of man's perpetual struggle to preserve human dignity in the face of unimaginable horrors are just as relevant today. ATTENTION: This is PAL format for Europe. A region-free DVD player is needed in the US and Canada.

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
Made in 1964 this was a film that has more than stood the test of time. It opens with two Jewish boys running from a train transport somewhere in Germany. They are running for their lives and the film captures the sheer fear and desperation perfectly. Using camera techniques that take you with them rather than as a voyeur you are transported with them to their plight. The hand held camera is often used to show in graphic detail the hardships they go through.They are starving, wet and cold - add to this the exhaustion and fear and you can feel only pity for these two lads. The film also uses flash backs and dream sequences to things that may or have happened and repeated visuals of nightmares and glimpses of what might have been. Instead of acting as an alienation device though, these techniques help to explore the complex feelings and mind sets of the boys.At only 68 minutes long it does seem to fly by but it is a film you will remember long afterwards. In some scenes the boys have the letters `KL' painted on their backs. I tried to find out what this was referencing and I think it indicated that they were inmates of the concentration camp at Krakov - this would fit with them being transported to another camp which is the film's back story. This is a brilliant, stark, moving and exceptional piece of film making that I can highly recommend to cinema history fans.
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