Village Voice by Edward Crouse
Worth sticking around for: the triumphant end credit sequence of each Red Orchestra mug shot morphing into the next one.
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Germany, United States · 2003
1h 27m
Director Stefan Roloff
Starring
Genre Documentary, History
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The Red Orchestra was a Berlin-based resistance group that fought against the Third Reich within Germany. The Gestapo labeled them Communists and traitors, and so did the Allies. Only recently have historians recognized them as one of the most critical resistance groups to WWII. Their story is told for the first time on film.
Village Voice by Edward Crouse
Worth sticking around for: the triumphant end credit sequence of each Red Orchestra mug shot morphing into the next one.
The New York Times by Janet Maslin
Films like "The Pianist" and "Schindler's List" immerse viewers in the bleakness of that time. The Red Orchestra is set in a sunnier world, which seems more frighteningly false. The bright, quotidian landscape seems a facade that threatens to tumble at any moment.
Unfortunately, this earnest but short-sighted documentary by New York-based painter-turned-filmmaker Stefan Roloff touches only the tip of a very large iceberg.
Chilling documentary.