Fotoamator Explained

Fotoamator
Director:Dariusz Jablonski
Producer:Dariusz Jablonski
Cinematography:Tomasz Michałowski
Editing:Milenia Fiedler
Music:Michał Lorenc
Runtime:52 minutes
Country:Poland
Language:Polish
German
French
English

Fotoamator (internationally released as Photographer) is a 1998 Polish documentary film directed by Dariusz Jablonski, examining the life of the Jewish population and their Nazi overseers in the Łódź Ghetto.

Subject

In 1987, several hundred color slides documenting scenes from the Łódź Ghetto during World War II were discovered in a second-hand bookstore in Vienna, Austria. These slides were the work of Walter Genewein, an Austrian citizen serving the Nazis. Being an accountant in the ghetto's council, he solicited for turning the ghetto into a prosperous and well-organised company, and since he was not just an ambitious office worker, but also an enthusiastic photographer, he recorded their "achievements" with a camera.

Genewein's slides are used by the authors to show—both through them and, to some extent, in spite of them—the real history of the Łódź Ghetto and the suffering and eventual extermination of the Polish Jews living there. The photographs are combined and compared with the recollections of Dr. Arnold Mostowicz, who worked as a doctor in the ghetto, and the last surviving witness of the events.[1]

Awards

External links

Notes and References

  1. Dariusz Jabłoński, Fotoamator (1998)
  2. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0188996/awards Internet Movie Database