Sobibor, 14 Octobre, 1943, 16 Heures
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History Documentary hosted by cast themselves, published by Why Not Productions in 2001 - French narration
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At Sobibor, where Jews were usually gassed almost immediately upon arrival, a small number were selected for slave labor. Knowing that they were doomed and led by an experienced soldier, a Jewish captain of the Red Army, a handful of inmates resolved to kill the few Germans in command of the large and brutal Ukrainian contingent that actually did most of the dirty work. Despite the horror of the situation and Mr. Lerner's subdued but dramatic recitation of his many escapes from German hands before landing in Sobibor, both he and the audience can not resist a smile when he repeatedly emphasizes that the escape plot could never have succeeded but for the Germans' compulsive, indeed fanatical, penchant for punctuality. That was the key to quickly killing them before any discovered what was coming down. Each was lured to a different camp shop with their "appointments" spaced only a few minutes apart. The drama in this documentary is almost wholly in the interview, on-site scenes having a largely marginal quality. The film ends with a long recitation, presumably by the director, of the dates, places of origin and numbers of each of the transports to Sobibor. Chilling - and this infamous monument to madness was only one extermination camp
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- Duration: 1h 42mn
- File size: 3.68 GB
- Container: MKV
- Width: 1180 pixels
- Height: 720 pixels
- Display aspect ratio: 1.639
- Overall bit rate: 5155 kbs
- Frame rate: 23.976 fps
- Audio Codec: AC3
- Channel(s): 2 channels
- Sampling rate: 48.0 KHz
- Credit goes to: godcanjudgeme
- Source: BluRay
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