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Based on the beloved best-selling book comes this profoundly moving story of a girl who transforms the lives of those around her during World War II, Germany. Although Liesel (Sophie Nélisse) is illiterate when she is adopted by a German couple (Geoffrey Rush and Emily Watson), her adoptive father encourages her to learn to read. Ultimately, the power of words helps Liesel and Max (Ben Schnetzer), a Jew hiding in the family’s home, escape from the events unfolding around them in this extraordinary, acclaimed film directed by Brian Percival. (20th Century Fox AU)

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Reviews (8)

Necrotongue 

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English A melodramatic film set in World War II, narrated by the Great Reaper himself. While the heroic Wehrmacht is conquering most of Europe and marching toward Moscow; under the roof of Hubermann’s house, the Judeo-Bolshevik menace rears its ugly head. The film reminded me of the Czech comedy Divided We Fall. It’s well cast, and the performances do it justice. It does have its weaknesses, though. In fact, the message it tries to get across is that not all Germans were bad during the war, but it does so in a very naive way. In the end, I was under the impression that the town had only two Nazis out of conviction: the mayor and Franz Deutscher. I was annoyed by the heartbreakingly poignant scenes, which didn’t need to be there at all. Nevertheless, I still liked the film, being the sensitive guy I am. ()

kaylin 

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English The film has moments that are inventive, interesting, but it still heavily relies on the fact that it is a story from World War II, seen through the eyes of a rather young girl who has to come to terms with the fact that adolescence is different in such times. It is beautiful, it is human, it is sometimes a bit simplistic, but it still managed to touch my heart. And that is thanks to the brilliant Geoffrey Rush. ()

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D.Moore 

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English The beautiful story is only separated from perfection by a strange linguistic entanglement. The characters speak English with a German accent (except for the mayor's fiery speech, which is all in German), German words "ja", "nein", "und", "Saumensch" and so on are sometimes slipped into their English sentences, there are German signs on all the houses, and yet the books are written in English and so are the people... That's just something you don't have to deal with when you read the book, but you do in the film. But otherwise I have nothing to complain about in The Book Thief. Amazing performances by Sophie Nélisse, Geoffrey Rush and Emily Watson, a number of unforgettable scenes backed by Williams' out-of-this-world music (the snow battle leads the way), perfect narration... I'm so glad I watched The Book Thief on the big screen. ()

lamps 

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English On paper, this film must come across as a disproportionately drawn-out and highly sentimental amalgamation of all the clichés one can recall from stories about evil Nazis and the power of friendly values in times of war. But I confess that I found the final form, its effective narrative strategies, the performances, the approach to the viewer and the way the film presents itself so unobtrusively yet compulsively impressive that I have to subjectively increase the lower objective rating. On the poetically ironic commentary of an unusual narrator, on the light tones of Williams's soundtrack, and on the purely humanistic messages through the lens of uncorrupted human souls, I rode comfortably to a powerful cinematic experience that may be too pleasant given the gravity of the subject matter, but what it wants to convey, it conveys effectively and without fail. ()

POMO 

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English Everything you wanted to re-watch for the thousandth time about the Nazis and their victims, in a transparent and sentimental package with another ultra-fragile music score by John Williams. Innocent children, a good-natured Jew in hiding, a papa with a big heart and a caring mom. Everybody loves each other very much while maintaining family values, but unfortunately there’s the Gestapo knocking on their door... A nicely filmed mainstream tearjerker. Geoffrey Rush and Emily Watson are worthy of a higher form of cinematic art. ()

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