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Escape from Sobibor

Escape from Sobibor is a 1987 British television film which aired on ITV and CBS. It is the story of the mass escape from the Nazi extermination camp at Sobibor, the most successful uprising by Jewish prisoners of German extermination camps. The film was directed by Jack Gold and shot in Avala, Yugoslavia. The full 176-minute version shown in the UK on 10 May 1987 followed a 143-minute version shown in the United States on 12 April 1987.

Background
On 14 October 1943, members of the Sobibor camp's underground resistance killed 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. After the escape, the 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. == Plot ==
Plot
When a new trainload of Polish Jews arrives for processing at Sobibor, the German Commandant assures them the place is a work camp. SS officers select a small number of prisoners with trade skills (such as goldsmiths, seamstresses, shoemakers, and tailors) and the remainder are sent to a different part of the camp from which a pillar of smoke rises day and night. The prisoners come to realise Sobibor is a death camp where Jews are exterminated in gas chambers, and cremated in large ovens. The skilled prisoners who are spared must sort the belongings of the murder victims and then repair the shoes, recycle the clothing, and melt down any precious metals to make jewellery for the SS. The existence of the surviving prisoners is precarious and they are subject to random beatings and murders. When two prisoners escape from a work detail, the most sadistic of the SS officers, Gustav Wagner, gives the remaining thirteen prisoners the choice of either selecting another prisoner to die with them, or refusing in which case he will kill fifty prisoners. The prisoners comply and he executes all twenty six. The leader of the prisoners, Leon Feldhendler, realises 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, hoping the Ukrainian guards will remain oblivious with no Germans to give orders or raise the alarm. A new group of Red Army prisoners who are Russian Jews arrives, and their leader, Sasha Pechersky and his men willingly join the revolt, their military skills proving invaluable. The camp commandant departs for several days with Wagner, ensuring the most sadistic SS officers will be absent. On 14 October 1943 SS officers and NCOs are lured one by one into traps and killed with knives and clubs. Eleven Germans are killed, but one officer, Karl Frenzel discovers the corpse of one of his colleagues and raises the alarm. The prisoners have already assembled on the parade ground and, realising the plan has been discovered, Pechersky and Feldhendler urge the prisoners to revolt and flee the camp. Most of the 600 prisoners run for the perimeter fences, some of the Jews using captured rifles to shoot their way through the Ukrainian guards. Machine gun fire from the observation towers kill many of the fleeing prisoners, and other escapees are killed in the minefield surrounding the camp. Over 300 Jews reach the forest and escape into the forest. Newscaster Howard K. Smith narrates the fates that befell some of the survivors on whose accounts the film was based. Of the 300 prisoners who escaped, only approximately 50 survived to see the end of the war in 1945. Pechersky made it back to Soviet lines and rejoined the Red Army and survived the war while Feldhendler was killed shortly after the war by anti-semitic Poles. Sergeant Wagner escaped to Brazil, where he was stabbed to death in 1980. 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 ==
Cast
In credits order: • Alan Arkin as Leon FeldhendlerJoanna Pacuła as Luka (Gertrude Poppert-Schonborn) • Rutger Hauer as Lieutenant Aleksander 'Sasha' PecherskyHartmut Becker as SS-Hauptscharführer Gustav WagnerJack Shepherd as Itzhak Lichtman • Emil Wolk as Samuel Freiberg • Simon Gregor as Stanisław 'Shlomo' SzmajznerLinal Haft as Kapo Porchek • Jason Norman as Thomas 'Toivi' BlattRobert Gwilym as Chaim Engel • Eli Nathenson as Moses Szmajzner • Kurt Raab as SS-Oberscharführer Karl FrenzelEric Caspar as SS-Hauptsturmführer Franz ReichleitnerHugo Bower as SS-Oberscharführer Rudolf BeckmannKlaus Grünberg as SS-Oberscharführer Erich BauerWolfgang Bathke as SS-Unterscharführer Hurst • Henning Gissel as SS-Scharführer Josef Fallaster • Henry Stolow as SS-Untersturmführer Johann NiemannUllrich Haupt as SS-Scharführer Josef Wolf • Patti Love as Eda Fiszer Lichtman • Judith Sharp as Bajle Sobol • as Selma WijnbergDavid Miller as Tailor Mundek • Jack Chissick as Hershel Zuckerman • Ned Vukovic as Morris • Sara Sugarman as Naomi • Peter Jonfield as Kapo Sturm • Dijana Kržanić as Esther Terner • Irfan Mensur as Kalimali • Zoran Stojiljković as Boris • Svetolik Nikačević as Old Man • Miša Janketić as Oberkapo Berliner • Dejan Čavić as Kapo Spitz • Zlatan Fazlagić as Weiss • Predrag Milinković as Kapo Jacob • Svetislav Goncić as Gardener • Gojko Baletić as Guard (uncredited) • Milan Erak as SS Corporal (uncredited) • Rastislav Jović as Shlomo's Father (uncredited) • Erol Kadić as Gardener • Miroljub Lešo as Prisoner (uncredited) • Bozidar Pavićević-Longa as SS-Sturmmann Ivan Klatt (uncredited) • Howard K. Smith as Narrator (American version) (uncredited) • Dragomir Stanojević as Guard (uncredited) • Predrag Todorović as Guard (uncredited) • Jelena Žigon as Shlomo's Mother (uncredited) == Production ==
Production
Casting Rutger Hauer, cast as Lieutenant Aleksander 'Sasha' Pechersky, was known to audiences mostly for playing "bad guys". A few years prior, he had played Albert Speer, the Nazi economics minister, in Inside the Third Reich. Hauer expressed no issues in playing a Jew, stating in an interview that "the whole idea of a Jewish type was a fiction created by Hitler, anyway". Hauer did not meet Pechersky. Producer Dennis E. Doty noted that "internal energy" was a factor when casting actors for roles, describing Hauer as an "outgoing, tough, bombastic, theatrical man". in Lipovička šuma. It cost around $6 million and included about 600 extras to shoot the scenes of the escape. Doty told television critics that the scale of brutality depicted in the film had to be scaled back, as he did not think audiences would accept portrayal of the true level of violence that inmates experienced. Survivor involvement Three camp survivors worked as consultants, including Thomas Blatt, who is portrayed as a child in the film. Blatt provided a small model of the camp's layout, which helped design the set for the film. Blatt was unconcerned about which actors were chosen, highlighting that it was of greater importance to tell the story. Esther Rabb, another survivor, also served as a consultant for the film. She was 10 years old when sent to Sobibor. After watching the film, she described it as "so real that it's scary". About 20 camp survivors who escaped were alive at the time of filming. ==Reception==
Reception
Critical response Writing for the Lincoln Courier, Robert Laurence believed the film had shortcomings, such as the failure to explain why Leon was regarded as a leader in the camp, as well as the general appearance of inmates looking better than may have been expected in reality. However, he accepted that the story needed telling and not to be forgotten. Reactions The film caused controversy among Ukrainian-American and Ukrainian-Canadian groups. They objected to how the film showed Ukrainian guards helping the Nazis, arguing that it created a negative stereotype of Ukrainians as anti-semitic. These groups protested and asked CBS to make changes to the film, as well as seeking support from Jewish organisations. Demonstrations took place outside several CBS studios and the groups even called for a boycott of Chrysler, the film's sponsor. A spokesperson for CBS and Chrysler defended the film, saying it was historically researched, used interviews from survivors and was not meant to offend or insult. While Elan Steinberg of the World Jewish Congress supported the protests, he accepted that many guards at Sobibor were Ukrainian. At the same time, he warned that the film could unfairly suggest that all Ukrainians were responsible, since it did not show the role of other European groups or acknowledge Ukrainians who risked their lives to protect Jews. == See also ==
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