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I'm tired. Maybe next week!
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The camp is supposed to be Auschwitz. I'm reading the book right now and Bruno calls it "out-with". That's how he hears it (so he calls it that). I really want to see it, I'll probably see it this week since I'm on winter break. But knowing that I'm going to cry, I have to be in the mood, if that makes sense. The book is good, so far, it is different because it is told from Bruno's POV and he see's the world so differently because he is only 9 (in the book). It is somewhat refreshing that WW2 and the Holocaust is being told from an "innocent" (he's a child) person's POV. |
I really want to see it now.
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I saw it and thought it was great. No, I probably won't watch it again for a while - mostly because it is extremely intense. Hard to explain, but I felt drained after I saw it.
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In some ways, the manner in which the book is written is similar to that book of George Orwell's "Animal Farm", in that it can be read on a very basic, "face value" sort of way, and then also on a deeper layered-level sort of way. |
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For example, Bruno hears and pronounces the "Auschwitz" camp as "Out-With". But this term "out-with" is a (non-funny) pun as well, as in "Out with certain groups of people who exist in society". ("Out-with"/Auschwitz is never expressly mentioned nor referred to in the movie.). I still think of this movie...the story haunts me, I guess you could say. |
I actually just got permission to have my students (high school) read the book. I printed off a discussion guide that the website actually offers for instructors. My AP asked if I had read it (which I have). I told him that the story was told from a childs POV and while the topics, while sensative, can be discussed in a classroom setting. Plus, I told him that I get the History tie in (which schools are so into the "cross-curricular" tie in's). I'm thrilled, mainly because I love the historical aspect of the novel, I also love the moral aspect of the novel.
I am hoping to be able to see the movie this weekend. I was actually right by the valley art theater this past Sunday (my parents and I were testing out the new light rail), but because I was with my parents, I wasn't able to stop and see it. My dad was like "why is it only here?". I told him it was an "artsy" movie with limited release (which I'm sure is actually somewhat true). |
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I bought the movie when it was released. I really enjoyed it, but like Fawn Liebowitz said, I felt drained after watching it. I was bawling like a big old baby at the end of the movie. I have to say that I appreciate that they followed the book pretty darn closely. That's always a bonus to me.
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