Escape from Sobibor
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Escape from Sobibor | |
---|---|
Genre | Drama History War |
Written by | Thomas Blatt (manuscript) Richard Rashke (book) Reginald Rose (teleplay) Stanislaw Szmajzner (book) |
Directed by | Jack Gold |
Starring | Alan Arkin Joanna Pacuła Rutger Hauer Hartmut Becker Jack Shepherd |
Narrated by | Howard K. Smith |
Music by | Georges Delerue |
Country of origin | United Kingdom / Yugoslavia |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Executive producer | Martin Starger |
Producers | (co-producer) (associate producer) |
Cinematography | Ernest Vincze |
Editor | Keith Palmer |
Running time | 176 minutes (UK/ITV - 169 minutes with PAL speed-up) 143 minutes (US/CBS) 120 minutes (edited) |
Production companies | Zenith Entertainment Rule Starger |
Distributor | CBS |
Release | |
Original network | ITV Central |
Picture format | Colour |
Audio format | Mono |
Original release | 12 April 1987 (US/CBS) 10 May 1987 (UK/ITV) |
Escape from Sobibor is a 1987 British television film which aired on ITV and CBS.[1] It is the story of the mass escape from the German extermination camp at Sobibor, the most successful uprising by Jewish prisoners of German extermination camps (uprisings also took place at Auschwitz-Birkenau and Treblinka). The film was directed by Jack Gold and shot in Avala, Yugoslavia (now Serbia). The full 176-minute version shown in the UK[note 1] on 10 May 1987 was pre-empted by a 143-minute version shown in the United States on 12 April 1987.
The script, by Reginald Rose, was based on Richard Rashke's 1983 book of the same name,[2] along with a manuscript by Thomas Blatt, "From the Ashes of Sobibor", and a book by Stanisław Szmajzner, Inferno in Sobibor.[3] Alan Arkin, Joanna Pacuła, and Rutger Hauer were the primary stars of the film. The film received a Golden Globe Award for Best Miniseries or Television Film[4] and Hauer received a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role—Television Film or Miniseries.[5] Esther Raab[6][7] was a camp survivor who had assisted Rashke with his book and served as a technical consultant.[8]
Background[]
On 14 October 1943, members of the Sobibor camp's underground resistance succeeded in covertly killing 11 German SS-Totenkopfverbände officers and a number of Sonderdienst Ukrainian and Volksdeutsche guards. Of the 600 inmates in the camp, roughly 300 escaped, although all but 50–70 were later re-captured and killed.[9] After the escape, SS Chief Heinrich Himmler ordered the death camp closed. It was dismantled, bulldozed under the earth, and planted over with trees to cover it up.[10]
Plot[]
The film begins with a new trainload of Polish Jews arriving for processing at Sobibor. The German Commandant gives them a welcoming speech, assuring the new arrivals that the place is a work camp. Other SS officers move along the assembled lines of prisoners, selecting a small number who have trade skills (such as goldsmiths, seamstresses, shoemakers, and tailors). The remaining prisoners are sent away to a different part of the camp from which a pillar of smoke rises day and night. It is some time before the new prisoners realize Sobibor is a death camp, all of the other Jews are exterminated in gas chambers, and their corpses are cremated in large ovens. The small number of prisoners who are kept alive in the other part of the camp are charged with sorting the belongings taken from those who are murdered and then repairing the shoes, recycling the clothing, and melting down any silver or gold to make jewelry for the SS officers. Despite their usefulness, these surviving prisoners' existence is precarious, and beatings and murders can occur at any time.
Gustav Wagner is the most clever and sadistic of the German officers. When two prisoners escape from a work detail in the nearby forest, Wagner forces the remaining 13 prisoners of the work gang to each select one other prisoner to die with them (under the threat that if they refuse, he will select 50) and then executes all 26.
The leader of the prisoners, Leon Feldhendler, realizes that when the trains eventually stop coming, the camp will have outlived its usefulness, and all the remaining Jews will be murdered. He devises a plan for every prisoner to escape, by luring the SS officers and NCOs into the prisoners' barracks and work huts one by one and killing them as quietly as possible. Once all the Germans are dead, the prisoners will assemble into columns and simply march out of the camp as if they have been ordered to, and it is hoped that the Ukrainian Guards, not knowing what is going on, and with no Germans left alive to give orders or raise the alarm, will not interfere. A new group of prisoners arrives: Russian Jews who were soldiers with the Soviet army. Their leader, Sasha Pechersky, and his men, willingly join the revolt, their military skills proving invaluable.
The Camp Kommandant leaves for several days, taking Wagner with him, which proves an advantage as the most cunning of the SS officers will be absent from Sobibor. On 14 October 1943, the plan goes into action. One by one, SS officers and NCOs are lured into traps set by groups of prisoners armed with knives and clubs. Eleven Germans are killed, but one officer, Karl Frenzel, unwittingly evades his killers, discovers the corpse of one of his colleagues, and raises the alarm. By now, the prisoners have assembled on the parade ground and, realizing the plan has been discovered, Pechersky and Feldhendler urge the prisoners to revolt and flee the camp. Most of the 600 prisoners stampede for the perimeter fences, some of the Jews using captured rifles to shoot their way through the Ukrainian guards. Other guards open fire with machine guns from observation towers, cutting many of the fleeing prisoners down, and other would-be escapees are killed on the minefield surrounding the camp. But over 300 Jews reach the forest and escape.
As the survivors flee deeper into the forest, famed newscaster Howard K. Smith narrates the experiences and fates that befell some of the survivors whose accounts the film was based on. Of the 300 prisoners who escaped, only approximately 50 survived to see the end of the war in 1945. Pechersky makes it back to Soviet lines and rejoins the Red Army, surviving the war, and Feldhendler lives to see the end of the war but is killed shortly afterwards in a clash with anti-Semitic Poles. After the uprising, the largest escape from a prison camp of any kind in Europe during World War II, Sobibor was bulldozed to the ground, and trees were planted on the site to remove any sign of its existence.
Cast[]
In credits order:
- Alan Arkin as Leon Feldhendler
- Joanna Pacuła as Luka ()
- Rutger Hauer as Lieutenant Aleksandr 'Sasha' Pechersky
- Hartmut Becker as SS-Hauptscharführer Gustav Wagner[note 2]
- Jack Shepherd as Itzhak Lichtman
- Emil Wolk as Samuel Freiberg
- as Stanisław 'Shlomo' Szmajzner
- Linal Haft as Kapo Porchek
- as Thomas 'Toivi' Blatt
- Robert Gwilym as Chaim Engel
- as Moses Szmajzner
- Kurt Raab as SS-Oberscharführer Karl Frenzel[note 3]
- as SS-Hauptsturmführer Franz Reichleitner
- as SS-Oberscharführer Rudolf Beckmann
- Klaus Grünberg as SS-Oberscharführer Erich Bauer
- as SS-Unterscharführer Hurst
- as SS-Scharführer Fallaster
- Henry Stolow as SS-Untersturmführer Johann Niemann
- Ullrich Haupt as SS-Scharführer Josef Wolf
- as Eda Fiszer Lichtman
- as Bajle Sobol
- Selma Wijnberg as
- as Tailor Mundek
- as Hershel Zuckerman
- as Morris
- Sara Sugarman as Naomi
- as Kapo Sturm
- as Esther Terner
- Irfan Mensur as Kalimali
- as Boris
- as Old Man
- Miša Janketić as Oberkapo Berliner
- as Kapo Spitz
- as Weiss
- Predrag Milinković as Kapo Jacob
- Svetislav Goncić as Gardener
- Bozidar Pavićević-Longa as SS-Sturmmann (uncredited)
- as Gardener (uncredited)
- as Guard (uncredited)
- Howard K. Smith as Narrator (American version)
- Jelena Žigon as Shlomo's Mother (uncredited)
- as Shlomo's Father (uncredited)
- as SS Corporal (uncredited)
- Miroljub Lešo as Prisoner (uncredited)
- as Guard (uncredited)
- as Guard (uncredited)
- as Lebnik (uncredited)
See also[]
- List of Holocaust films
- List of survivors of Sobibor
- Sobibor (2018), a film about the same topic starring Konstantin Khabensky
- The Grey Zone (2001), movie about the uprising in Auschwitz-Birkenau
Footnotes[]
- ^ Running to 169 minutes with PAL speed-up.
- ^ Although the character wears the rank insignia of a sturmscharführer, he is addressed as "hauptscharführer" throughout. Wagner held the lower rank of oberscharführer.
- ^ The character wears the collar patches of a scharführer and the epaulettes of a hauptscharführer, but is addressed by the actual Frenzel's correct rank of oberscharführer throughout.
References[]
- ^ "Escape from Sobibor (1987)". IMDB. Retrieved 22 April 2012.
- ^ Rashke, Richard (1995). Escape from Sobibor (Second ed.). University of Illinois Press. p. 416. ISBN 978-0252064791.
- ^ "Stanislaw Szmajzner - Sobibor Interviews".
- ^ "Best Television Limited Series or Motion Picture Made for Television". GoldenGlobes.com. Hollywood Foreign Press Association. Archived from the original on 25 January 2017. Retrieved 3 September 2017. (The film tied with Poor Little Rich Girl: The Barbara Hutton Story.)
- ^ "Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Series, Limited Series or Motion Picture Made for Television". GoldenGlobes.com. Hollywood Foreign Press Association. Archived from the original on 25 January 2017. Retrieved 3 September 2017.
- ^ "Esther Raab, 92, Holocaust survivor". philly-archives.
- ^ "Esther Raab - Sobibor Interviews". sobiborinterviews.nl.
- ^ "Remembering Esther Raab Tenner, a Holocaust Survivor". 29 June 2015.
- ^ Schelvis, Jules (2007). Sobibor: A History of a Nazi Death Camp. Berg, Oxford & New Cork. p. 168. ISBN 978-1-84520-419-8.
- ^ "History & Overview of Sobibor".
External links[]
- 1987 films
- 1987 television films
- 1987 drama films
- 1980s war films
- British films
- British war drama films
- British prison films
- British television films
- British World War II films
- Holocaust films
- CBS original programming
- ITV television dramas
- Films set in 1943
- Films set in Poland
- Films shot in Serbia
- Films shot in Yugoslavia
- Films based on American novels
- Drama films based on actual events
- World War II films based on actual events
- Films directed by Jack Gold
- Films scored by Georges Delerue
- Films with screenplays by Reginald Rose
- Best Miniseries or Television Movie Golden Globe winners
- Sobibor extermination camp
- Films shot in Belgrade