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    Night and The Pianist Compare and Contrast Both‚ the book Night and The Pianist movie‚ depict the Holocaust during the 1940s. In the beginning‚ both are sent to the ghettos to get sent off to the concentration camps. However‚ both suffer different but somewhat similar faiths as Wladyslaw Szpilman is set free from his family‚ to work as a slave labourer for the Germans. While Elie is still sent off to a concentration camp to be a laborer there. You can clearly see the similarities as both still have

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    Night and the Pianist It is said to be true that the Holocaust was one of the most tragic and significant events in recorded history. Personal memoirs like Night by Elie Wiesel‚ and The Pianist by Wladyslaw Szpilman gives vivid images and clear views on those epic catastrophes‚ which allows us as readers to acquire a better understanding of what really transpired during the 1940’s. Elie Wiesel‚ the author of Night‚ wrote his book on a collection of personal experiences that molded his life.

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    The Pianist Essay

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    ‘The Pianist’ is a cinematic masterpiece by the Polish director Roman Polanski. One of the key ideas that appear throughout much of the film is that of ‘hope being instrumental in our survival’. This idea is portrayed through Wladyslaw Szpilman‚ a Polish pianist‚ as he struggles for survival in Warsaw as everybody that he once knew and everything that he once had is lost. The idea of ‘hope being instrumental in our survival’ is worth learning about as it allows the audience to realise the importance

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    pianist

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    The Pianist is a work of genius on every level‚ except‚ alas‚ for the press-pack promotional slogan attributed to the director himself. “The Pianist is a testimony to the power of music‚ the will to live‚ and the courage to stand against evil.” If he actually said it‚ he flew in the face of his own masterpiece‚ which is a testimony to none of those things. In the Warsaw ghetto‚ the power of music‚ the will to live and the courage to stand against evil added up to very little‚ and The Pianist has

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    The Pianist

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    Film Analysis The Pianist Based on the autobiographical book by Wladyslaw Szpilman‚ The Pianist tells the story of Szpilman ’s struggle to survive the Nazi livelihood of Poland during World War II. Szpilman‚ a talented Jewish pianist and composer‚ witnessed first-hand horrors of the Warsaw Ghetto. The Nazis used this notorious‚ walled slum to imprison Polish Jews until their "resettlement" to concentration camps. While most of his Jewish relatives and friends perished in the holocaust‚ Szpilman

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    PİANİST

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    The Pianist is a historically based film that captivates the audience with its intense‚ riveting scenes. The movie outlines Hitler’s policies against the Jewish race during the holocaust in the late 1930’s. It focuses on the lives of one particular Jewish family during the period in which Hitler invades and occupies the Polish community of Warsaw. The title was inspired by the career of the main character before and after the Holocaust. The film chronicles the experiences of a Jewish pianist and

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    The Pianist

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    March 2013 Scene Analysis Paper Musical Dependency The 2002 film‚ The Pianist directed by Roman Polanski focuses on the hardships of a well-known‚ local concert pianist‚ Wladyslaw Szpilman. Wladyslaw Szpilman is played by actor Adrien Brody‚ who does an excellent job portraying both the warmhearted side of Szpliman and the desperate struggling side we see later on in the film. The film is based on Szpilman’s book‚ The Pianist where he discusses true events he underwent during the German takeover

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    The Pianist

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    ‘The Pianist’ is a film directed by Roman Polanski and based around the life of Wladyslaw Szpilman during the Nazi invasion of Poland. Roman used visual techniques in the opening scenes such as black and white film‚ camera positioning and motifs to create an atmosphere for the audience. The first scene in the film is a montage of grainy black and white scenes of Polish life before the Nazi invasion on Poland. The footage shows a dated world with old English style building and technology‚ people

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    Analysis of the Pianist

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    dominant color become gray. • First sign of light and hope when the Nazis prepare to leave Warsaw shown by the first glimmer of sunlight • Same symbol in the scene that Szpilman plays for the German commander: light shining on the piano and the pianist‚ both representing hope -Put us into the protagonist’s perspective: • Lack of close-up of what Szpilman is looking at‚ for instance from the window • In one scene‚ a bomb explodes nearby‚ and on the soundtrack we hear a high- pitched whistling

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    the Jews were persecuted‚ maltreated and deported to extermination camps. All these situations that the Jews had to experience during the Jewish Holocaust in the WWII are shown in the film The Pianist (Roman Polanski‚ 2003) from the point of view of Wladyslaw Szpilman (Adrien Brody)‚ a Polish Jew pianist

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