Claude Lanzmann: Spectres of the Shoah | |
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Directed by | Adam Benzine |
Produced by |
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Starring | Claude Lanzmann |
Cinematography | Alex Ordanis |
Edited by | Tiffany Beaudin |
Music by | Joel Goodman [1] Benjamin Krause |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | HBO (US) |
Release dates | |
Running time | 40 minutes |
Countries | Canada United States United Kingdom Germany |
Languages | French English German |
Claude Lanzmann: Spectres of the Shoah is a 2015 documentary-short film exploring the life and work of French director Claude Lanzmann. The film was written, directed, and produced by British filmmaker and journalist Adam Benzine.
The documentary explores the 12-year journey undertaken by Lanzmann to make his 1985 film Shoah , a nine-and-a-half-hour-long documentary about the Holocaust. In Spectres of the Shoah, Lanzmann details the practical and emotional challenges he faced from 1973 to 1985, explaining his efforts to convince traumatized death camp survivors to recount their Second World War experiences; the dangers he faced in tracking down and secretly filming SS Officers illegally; his own teenage years spent fighting in the French Resistance; his romance with Simone de Beauvoir and friendship with Jean-Paul Sartre; as well as his difficulties in composing into a single cohesive narrative more than 200 hours of material he collected. [2]
In making the short documentary, Benzine and his team worked with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum to secure a wide range of previously unseen outtake material, which was originally filmed during the making of Shoah , in order to help tell Lanzmann's personal story. [2]
Claude Lanzmann: Spectres of the Shoah had its world premiere on April 25, 2015, almost 30 years to the day that Shoah was released, [3] at the Hot Docs film festival in Toronto, Canada, [4] where it won an Honourable Mention in the Best Mid-Length Documentary Competition. [5]
During the festival, U.S. premium cable network HBO acquired the American TV rights to the film. [6] Sheffield Doc/Fest hosted the European Premiere of the film in June 2015, [7] and the San Francisco Jewish Film Festival hosted the U.S. festival premiere for the film on July 28, at the Castro Theater in San Francisco. [8]
The film continued its festival run throughout the fall of 2015 with its London premiere at the UK Jewish Film Festival, and international screenings at the Camden International Film Festival, the Hamptons International Film Festival, the Vienna International Film Festival, the Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival, the Vancouver Jewish Film Festival, DOC NYC in New York, and IDFA in Amsterdam.
Franco-German broadcaster ARTE broadcast the doc on January 27, 2016, as did the CBC's Documentary Channel [9] in Canada and SVT in Sweden, while HBO broadcast the U.S. premiere of the film on May 2 of the same year. [6] Danish broadcaster DR, which along with ZDF/ARTE was an early investor in the film, will broadcast it in 2017.
Claude Lanzmann was the first motion picture to be released as a non-fungible token (NFT) on March 15, 2021. [10] Ten 'first edition' tokens were offered for auction via the blockchain auction site Rarible.
The film has met with widespread critical acclaim as it has played at film festivals, theatrically and on television. The Toronto Star described the film as "a stunning revelation to both people who have seen Shoah and people who have not" in its Hot Docs review, [11] while the San Francisco Chronicle described it as "fascinating." [12] In a four-star review, NOW billed the film as "an essential supplement to one of the most important documentaries ever made," [13] while The Globe and Mail rated the doc 3.5 out of 4, saying it was both "fascinating and upsetting." [14]
Award / Event | Date of ceremony | Category | Result |
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88th Academy Awards [15] [16] | 28 February 2016 | Best Documentary Short Subject | Nominated |
38th Rockie Awards [17] | 12 June 2017 | Best History & Biography Program | Nominated |
Best Francophone Program | Nominated | ||
2017 Canadian Screen Awards [18] | 7 March 2017 | Best Direction in a Documentary Program | Nominated |
Best Picture Editing in a Documentary Program or Series | Nominated | ||
Best Original Music for a Non-Fiction Program or Series | Nominated | ||
Barbara Sears Award for Best Visual Research | Nominated | ||
2016 Canadian Cinema Editors Awards [19] | 2 June 2016 | Best Editing in Documentary - Short Form | Won |
9th Cinema Eye Honors [20] | 13 January 2016 | Outstanding Achievement in Nonfiction Short Filmmaking | Nominated |
44th Grierson Awards [21] | 7 November 2016 | Best Newcomer Documentary | Nominated |
22nd Hot Docs Film Festival [22] | 1 May 2015 | Best Mid-Length Documentary Competition | Honourable Mention |
31st IDA Documentary Awards [23] | 5 December 2015 | Best Documentary Short Film | Nominated |
14th Warsaw Jewish Film Festival [24] | 27 November 2016 | Best Short Documentary | Won |
11th Los Angeles Italia Film Festival [25] | 21 February 2016 | Best Short Film of the Year | Won |
18th Thessaloniki Documentary Festival [26] | 20 March 2016 | Audience Award for Best International Short Documentary | Won |
Shoah is a 1985 French documentary film about the Holocaust, directed by Claude Lanzmann. Over nine hours long and 11 years in the making, the film presents Lanzmann's interviews with survivors, witnesses and perpetrators during visits to German Holocaust sites across Poland, including extermination camps.
Claude Lanzmann was a French filmmaker known for the Holocaust documentary film Shoah (1985), and for his 2017 documentary film Napalm, about a love affair he had with a North Korean nurse whilst visiting North Korea several years after the Korean War.
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