Jonah Who Lived in the Whale explained

Jonah Who Lived in the Whale
Director:Roberto Faenza
Starring:Jean-Hugues Anglade
Music:Ennio Morricone
Cinematography:János Kende
Editing:Nino Baragli
Runtime:100 minutes
Country:Italy
France
Language:English
Gross:$30,000[1]

Jonah Who Lived in the Whale (Italian: '''Jona che visse nella balena'''), in the United States released as (Look to the Sky) is a 1993 Italian-French drama film directed by Roberto Faenza, based on the autobiographical novel by the writer Jona Oberski entitled Childhood (Dutch: Kinderjaren), focused on the drama of the Holocaust. It was entered into the 18th Moscow International Film Festival, where it won the Prix of Ecumenical Jury.[2]

Plot

Jonah is a three-year-old Dutch boy who lives in Amsterdam during the Second World War. After the occupation of the city by the Germans, he was deported to the concentration camp together with his entire family in 1942. Here Jonah will spend the remainder of the war in a shack with his mother, but separated from his father.

The child suffers cold, hunger, fear, deprivation, and even harassment by the other boys. He seldom encounters compassion: only the cook, who later dies, and the doctor of the clinic show him kindness. The fate of Jonah's parents is tragic: his father dies of exhaustion from being overworked and his mother succumbs in a hospital after the end of the war, having been driven insane by her ordeal and her husband's death.

However, Jonah survives and, back to Amsterdam, is adopted in his father's employer home where, after an initial period of suffering, he regains the will to live.

Many years after the war Jonah has become a nuclear physicist, gets married, and has three sons.

Cast

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Jona che visse nella balena (1994)- JPBox-Office. JP. www.jpbox-office.com. 11 December 2017.
  2. Web site: 18th Moscow International Film Festival (1993) . 9 March 2013 . MIFF . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140403093721/http://www.moscowfilmfestival.ru/miff34/eng/archives/?year=1993 . 3 April 2014 .