Watch unlimited films online for $6.99.
Try MUBI for FREE.
 

The Island on Bird Street

Denmark, United Kingdom, Germany

1997

107 Min
Color
1.66:1
English, German, Latin
  • Currently 2.5/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

   |   

DIR Søren Kragh-Jacobsen

EXEC Rolf Deyhle, David Korda

PROD Rudy Cohen, Tivi Magnusson

SCR John Goldsmith, Tony Grisoni, Uri Orlev

DP Ian Wilson

CAST Patrick Bergin, Jordan Kiziuk, Jack Warden, James Bolam, Stefan Sauk, Simon Gregor, Lee Ross, Suzanna Hamilton

ED David Martin

PROD DES Norbert Scherer

MUSIC Zbigniew Preisner

Berlinale (Competition): Outstanding Single Achievement, Special Mention

Synopsis

During World War II, twelve year old Alex, his father Stefan, their Uncle Boruch and Alex’s pet mouse Snow live in Warsaw in the Jewish ghetto, around which the Nazis have erected a fence so that no one can get out. The Polish Jews live their daily lives in the bombed out ghetto, but go into hiding whenever the Nazi soldiers come for what they call the selection process when truckloads of Jews are hauled away to an unknown future. Alex’s family is one of the last in the ghetto, when the Nazis come to haul all remaining Jews away. Previously discussed amongst themselves, Alex manages to escape from the Nazis before he can be taken away. Alex is supposed to hide in the ghetto, with Stefan vowing that he will eventually come back for him. As Alex lives alone in the ghetto, he has to use his resourcefulness to find food and potable water, and to find a suitable hiding place for whenever the Nazis come looking for any remaining Jews. He also has to assess who he can and cannot trust amongst the handful of remaining people who are also hiding out in the ghetto. After he meets and befriends two other hiding Jews named Freddy and Henryk, Alex is shown a secret tunnel leading out of the ghetto into unfenced Warsaw. Alex has to make the decision to go to the safer unfenced zone, where the likelihood of ever seeing Stefan again is slim to none, or to stay in the ghetto and the thought of reuniting with Stefan but with the understanding that the Nazis will eventually demolish the ghetto. –IMDb

Director

Original

Søren Kragh-Jacobsen

Born 1947, Danmark. Composer, song-writer, film director. Attended film school in Prague. Programme director for a number of years at DR TV. While his works from the eighties and nineties brought him a large Danish audience, they also brought him international renown. Kragh-Jacobsen is one of the Dogme brothers, in the company of Trier, Vinterberg and Levring.

Kragh-Jacobsen’s children’s classic »Gummi-Tarzan«/»Rubber Tarzen« (1981) was a winner at Moscow, Berlin and Gijon. »Skyggen af Emma«/»Emma’s Shadow« (1988) and »Drengene fra Sankt Petri«/»The Boys from St. Petri« (1991) were also successful on the festival circuit, while »Øen i fuglegaden«/»The Island on Bird Street« (1997) received numerous accolades at festivals, including Berlin. Two years later his dogme feature »Mifunes sidste sang«/»Mifune« (1999) received the Berlin Silver Bear. Among his prestigious awards is the Memorial Francois Truffaut Award from Giffoni. With his elleventh feature, »Det som ingen ved«/»What… read more

Wall

Displaying 0 wall posts.

Related Films

Fans

Displaying 1 of 1 fans.

Reviews

No reviews yet — Write the first

Forum

Displaying 0 discussion topics.