Non member Defiance Reviews

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advicky
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Post by advicky »

Defiance
PETER TRAVERS
2.5/4

Daniel Craig, the best James Bond since Sean Connery, no matter how much Quantum of Solace sucked his spirit, gets a true story to dig into this time. And it's a doozy. In Defiance, Craig brings grit and gravity to the role of Tuvia Bielski, the eldest of three Jewish brothers who led the resistance against the Nazis from their base in the Nalibocka Forest in Belorussia during World War II. Joseph Stalin, who famously opined that "Jews make poor warriors," never met the Bielskis. Brother Zus (an outstanding Liev Schreiber) is a hothead who thinks Tuvia is too conciliatory. Younger brother Asael (Jamie Bell) labors to find a balance between Zus, who wants revenge by gun, grenade and whatever's handy, and Tuvia, who believes that "our revenge is to live."

Just as he did with the black soldiers in the Civil War-themed Glory, director Edward Zwick has seized on a strong, underserved subject. The excellent source material is Defiance: The Bielski Partisans, by historian Nechama Tec. Sadly, the script by Zwick and Clayton Frohman veers off into action clichés, clunky dialogue and Hollywood hoo-ha (a bare-chested sex scene for Craig — please!) when the facts reveal a richer tale. For all the film's flaws, this is a war story told with passion about a band of brothers that still has the power to inspire.

http://www.rollingstone.com/reviews/mov ... 8/defiance






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Thelma
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Post by Thelma »

Craig and Schreiber lead the forest fighters of 'Defiance'

Ed Zwick found a fresh take on World War II: Jews fight back.

"Defiance" charts the remarkable true story of the Bielski brothers from Poland, who battled the Germans and their collaborators in the forests of Belarussia and helped save about 1,200 Jews (those are Oskar Schindler numbers). Zwick wrote recently in the New York Times that when his friend, screenwriter Clay Frohman, first approached him with the idea for a Holocaust-themed film, Zwick groaned, "Not another movie about victims."

Uh, no. The oppressed Jews in this film have machine guns and kick some serious Nazi butt.

We're never far removed from the aftershocks of World War II -- not geo-politically, and not at the multiplex. Along with "Defiance," you can also witness the plot to kill Hitler ("Valkyrie"), and the love story of a former SS guard ("The Reader").

Although Zwick ("Glory") gets carried away at times with the gung-ho theatrics, "Defiance" is a rousing movie experience, thanks in part to fierce performances from Daniel Craig and Liev Schreiber as the two oldest battling Bielskis (Tuvia and Zus). They are joined by Asael (Jamie Bell) and the much younger Aron (George MacKay). Just a boy, Aron conveys a great deal in his silences.

Barely dodging death at multiple turns, the Bielskis manage to find refuge deep in the forest, beautifully captured by director of photography Eduardo Serra, who worked with Zwick on "Blood Diamond." Based on the book "Defiance: The Bielski Partisans" by Nechama Tec, the film is part guerrilla war journal, part harsh times chronicle.

The Bielskis recruit others, and soon a forest society of suffering emerges. It's the blending of women and children, the elderly, peasants, and intellectuals who fled the ghetto. A few cling to old traditions, others adapt to the new realities.

As Tuvia and Zus, two alpha males forever clashing, Craig and Schreiber deliver some of the strongest work of their careers. The brothers are awash in the simmering anger of two who have witnessed the worst of what man can do to his fellow man, and find revenge in perseverance.

The victims that Zwick was so tired of seeing on screen, the millions of Jews being slaughtered, are the motivation for the forest fighters. It took selfless, courageous men and women to confront the Nazis. "Defiance" is a tribute to their sacrifices.

http://www.cleveland.com/moviebuff/inde ... the_f.html
Thelma
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Post by Thelma »

Defiance (R) *** | A riveting portrayal of true heroes of WWII



The amazing real story behind Defiance is another example of truth's being stranger, and often more intriguing, than fiction. Based on a nonfiction book by Holocaust survivor Nechama Tec, the film tells the story of the Bielskis, three Jewish brothers who escaped the Nazis during World War II by hiding in the forest.

Led by the oldest, Tuvia, the Bielskis created a refuge in that freezing, inhospitable place for other Jews fleeing certain death. Their group, which eventually numbered 1,200, included large numbers of women, the elderly, even infants.

With a background this riveting, Defiance should pack a bigger emotional punch than it does. Directed by Edward Zwick (Blood Diamond, The Last Samurai), the film isn't much of a character study; too many of its secondary characters are stereotypes, and it never fully engages our emotions the way Schindler's List or The Pianist did.

But as a thinking person's action movie, Defiance accomplishes plenty; it's smart and well-acted, suspenseful and entertaining. Starting in 1941 with the slaughter or detaining of most of the Jews in a Belarus village, the film traces the moral paths of Tuvia (Daniel Craig) and Zus (Liev Schreiber) and their younger brother Asael (Jamie Bell) as they flee into the woods that have always been a sanctuary from the law.

Hot-headed Zus understandably lusts for vengeance, and at first Tuvia acquiesces; the film hints that the brothers, possible smugglers, have had plenty of run-ins with authority. One scene in which Tuvia confronts the man responsible for his parents' deaths is among the most harrowing in the film. But Tuvia, a man of action thrust suddenly into a position in which he must become contemplative or perish, realizes that revenge is not the only mission. The lost and damaged souls wandering through the forest are the Bielskis' responsibility. The brothers are the only ones with any experience at evading authority, and, without them, the others won't survive.

As the group grows larger, and food becomes scarce, conflicts erupt, and brotherly bonds are tested when Zus, itching for engagement, joins up with a band of Russian partisans. Craig and Schreiber infuse the fraying relationship between Tuvia and Zus -- men of few words who feel more than they admit -- with understated affection and, later, smoldering resentment.

Moments of pure Hollywood crop up from time to time -- such as the final confrontation -- and Defiance feels a bit flabby in its middle section. But Zwick stages many powerful scenes, and he uses his winter backdrop to mesmerizing effect, moving effortlessly to chronicle joy (the community celebrates a wedding, and snow falls softly and benignly) and danger (a tense standoff over dwindling supplies). Defiance may lack the sort of emotional punch that sticks, but its story of courage and responsibility is undeniably compelling.

Cast: Daniel Craig, Liev Schreiber, Jamie Bell, Alexa Davalos

Director: Edward Zwick

Screenwriters: Clayton Frohman, Edward Zwick. From the book by Nechama Tec.

Producers: Pieter Jan Brugge, Edward Zwick.

A Paramount Vantage release. Running time: 137 minutes. Violence, language. Playing at area theaters.

http://www.miamiherald.com/entertainmen ... 54072.html
cornell01
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Post by cornell01 »

Thank you for finding these great articles!
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Post by Laredo »

My hometown paper the St.Pete Times gave it a B+ but thought Dan was miscast , looking too wasp .
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Thelma
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Post by Thelma »

Film Review: Smart ‘Defiance’ is an exciting addition to Jewish action genre

The action-packed World War II drama “Defiance” is a smart, satisfying chunk of pulp nonfiction that, while totally accessible to a wide audience, will find its most enthusiastic fans among Jewish moviegoers.

Doubling as a Moses parable (with a nod to the Maccabees) and a rebuff to “Schindler’s List,” this absorbing film recounts the true-life saga of the Bielski brothers in Nazi-occupied Belorussia. Led by the fearless but reluctant Tuvia (Daniel Craig), the trio hid, defended and supported an ever-growing community of Jewish survivors in the forest.

“Defiance” is not above ladling on the clichés and contrivances of a Hollywood movie, from rat-a-tat set-piece heroics to romantic subplots. So it seems destined to find its eventual place in Jewish film history on a middle rung with films like “Exodus,” although it will hold up better than that epic.

“Defiance,” which opened in New York and Los Angeles the last week of December to qualify for Academy Awards consideration, opens around the country Friday, Jan. 16.

The opening frames establish the stakes, with familiar shots of Nazis rounding up and deporting Jews. Director Edward Zwick’s decision to segue from black-and-white documentary-style images to live-action color is ill advised and borders on trivialization, but it’s quickly forgotten as the story gallops ahead.

Finding their parents murdered, Zus (a powerful, earthy performance by Liev Schreiber), Asael (apple-cheeked Jamie Bell) and Aron (George MacKay) flee the family farm for the nearby woods, where they meet up with the eldest, Tuvia. Tough and resilient, the brothers have two concerns — revenge and survival.

It’s reassuring, and even thrilling, to see Jews with guns in a World War II movie, but to its credit much of “Defiance” revolves around the moral consequences of violence. Self-defense is justified, of course, and killing the enemy (including Belorussian collaborators) during wartime is necessary.

But Tuvia questions how far the brothers should go to shed blood, and how much satisfaction they should take. (Somehow I don’t expect Quentin Tarantino’s forthcoming “Inglourious Basterds,” about a platoon of Jewish American Nazi hunters, to have the same depth.)

Tuvia’s concern is that Jews will engage in the casual brutality of Nazis. The forest encampment does have Jews who shirk, steal and bully the weaker members of their own group, as well as those who can’t control their pent-up rage when a captured German is tossed into their midst.

As the Bielskis attract increasing numbers of stray Jews, feeding and protecting them becomes a greater priority than ambushing Nazis. So Zus, thirsting for revenge and ever-jealous of Tuvia, leaves to join a partisan remnant of the Red Army.

That storyline allows for bracing battle sequences that showcase Zus’ bravery — undercutting the stereotype of Jewish passivity — as well as the deep strains of anti-Semitism even among Nazi-hating Belorussians.

“Defiance” is a war movie first and a Holocaust film second, but it’s impossible not to read its overriding theme of Jews fighting back as a rejoinder to the cowed victims of “Schindler’s List.”

Zwick brushed aside the suggestion in an interview with j., saying he didn’t think filmmakers make movies in reaction to other movies. But it’s impossible not to read an editorial comment into the scene where a new arrival identifies himself as an accountant — Ben Kingsley’s character in Spielberg’s film, if you forgot.

“That’ll come in handy,” responds one of the elders sarcastically. It’s a throwaway line, but its meaning is clear: You won’t see anyone in “Defiance” carefully keeping a ledger while a third party saves Jewish lives. In this movie, Jews are doing it for themselves.

One of the film’s main achievements, in fact, is that it doesn’t key our emotions to the survival of the brothers’ or any single character, but to the community as a whole making it through despite setbacks and losses along the way.

As such, the parallel between Tuvia and Moses, unwilling leaders forced to accept the responsibility of leading their people to freedom, is far from the movie’s most compelling element (and scarcely needs to be hammered home by a supporting character’s third-act deathbed homily).

That said, “Defiance” is the rare movie that invites members of the tribe to take vicarious pleasure in Jewish action heroes. It doesn’t mean “Defiance” is a great film, or even for every Jew. But it’s one heckuva story.


“Defiance” opens Friday, January 16 in Bay Area theaters.

http://www.jewishsf.com/content/2-0-/mo ... story.html
Thelma
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Post by Thelma »

Defiance

Defiance is another in a recent line of Holocaust movies, this one based on a true story of the Bielski brothers who fled Poland, hid in the forest, and fought the Nazis to stay alive.

Part survival film, part combat movie, Defiance stars the always intense Daniel Craig and Liev Schreiber in a well-made, well-acted film from writer-director Ed Zwick.

He directed Glory, Legends Of The Fall and Blood Diamond . His latest isn't Oscar-caliber but it's better than most and well-intentioned.

http://www.kvue.com/sharedcontent/dws/w ... c3cc8.html
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Cyanaurora
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Post by Cyanaurora »

laredo wrote:My hometown paper the St.Pete Times gave it a B+ but thought Dan was miscast , looking too wasp .
I guess the reviewer didn't look at the history of the story. Tuvia had light brown hair and blue eyes. His sons said Zwick got the casting just right.
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Post by Germangirl »

Thanks Thelma - appearently the consens is, that the film is good with good to great performances but not unique, with flaws in some unnessesary points. Too bad Zwick didn´t strike an oscar nod with this one as he did with some of his others. With Daniel involved, obviously, we would have hoped for more critical acclaim. Most recommend it though, which is good and the film deserves that. ( I have seen it and look forward to the big screen)
The top notch acting in the Weisz/Craig/Spall 'Betrayal' is emotionally true, often v funny and its beautifully staged with filmic qualities..

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Laredo
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Post by Laredo »

Cyanaurora wrote:
laredo wrote:My hometown paper the St.Pete Times gave it a B+ but thought Dan was miscast , looking too wasp .
I guess the reviewer didn't look at the history of the story. Tuvia had light brown hair and blue eyes. His sons said Zwick got the casting just right.
St Pete is where the FL Holocaust museum is where they have a whole exibit on the brothers . I hope to catch it before it leaves , Though I agree the reviewer might not of done his homework .
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Thelma
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Post by Thelma »

Heroism shines in Defiance

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Inevitably — for 6 million reasons — most films about World War II cast the Jews as passive victims, carried like freight to their doom.

Rare is a movie like The Counterfeiters, in which pragmatic Jewish characters ply their wits to survive. Rarer still is the portrait of the Jew as fighter and hero, a brawny architect of his own fate.

We can find him in accounts of the Warsaw Ghetto (TV’s Uprising). In Defiance, we meet a whole forest full of them — led by a pair of muscular siblings brought to life, with growling intensity, by the edgy Liev Schreiber and the righteous Daniel Craig. Think of the latter as James Bond, if you must, but a more relevant piece of work is his 2005 performance as a fulminating Israeli Mossad agent in Steven Spielberg’s Munich. He bears a grudge the way he carries a gun: with two bare hands and a crease between his eyes.

The story of the Bielski brothers, who formed a secret partisan encampment that resisted the Nazis and sheltered more than a thousand Jews, was ripe for the picking. It’s astonishing to realize their saga hasn’t made it to the big screen before this, because it seems to have it all: wooded hideouts, vengeful bloodlust, feuding brothers and extreme human endurance. Just for good measure, the plot also throws in a few moments of stolen tenderness (sex!) and ferocious combat, condensing and fictionalizing history all the while.

But heroism, at least at the movies, must follow its appointed path. In 1941, oldest brother Tuvia (Craig), middle brother Zus (Schreiber) and younger brother Asael (Jamie Bell) escape from Nazi-occupied Poland into the Belarussian woods during a German campaign to deport and liquidate Jews. Their parents were killed by a local cop conspiring with the SS, and their first order of business is survival. Their second is revenge.

Far down the list of priorities is rescuing and feeding other Jews, but they have a way of showing up hungry: The liveliest is a nerdy commie intellectual played by a game Mark Feurstein. Zus, the hardened realist, wants to shrug them off and join up with a Russian contingent fighting the Germans. Tuvia becomes the conscience-stricken leader of the group — setting up camp, organizing supply raids and establishing a one-man rule of law that forms the basis of a makeshift village.

Director Edward Zwick, back on the battlefield with glory and sacrifice, abandons the heat-struck vistas of 2006’s Blood Diamond for a cooler, loamier corner of the world. The sights and sounds of covert forest living give Defiance a familiar Robin Hood aesthetic. Snow crunches, twigs snap. Sunlight stabs the canopy of trees.

It is, all in all, a film as square-shouldered as its leads — tough-minded, forcibly acted and conventionally spun by Zwick and co-writer Clayton Frohman, who adapted Nechama Tec’s Defiance: The Bielski Partisans. Aside from fudging the Bielskis’ birth order (Asael was older than Zus) and simplifying the meaty ethnic soup in that part of the world (the Poles aren’t happy), their quirkiest move was the decision to mash up English dialogue with subtitled vernacular. One second, everyone’s expectorating their lines in knockoff Eastern-European accents; in the next, by golly, they’re speaking Russian.

It’s less distracting than it sounds. And it hardly matters which language we’re hearing most of the time, because the chest-thumping message gets across with a minimum of verbiage. Men must be free; Jews must survive. And Tuvia, fully transformed into a Zwick-certified Hollywood hero, must ride a fine white horse through the forest.

That is, until he kills it to feed his people. “Our revenge,” as he says, “is to live.”

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ent ... 13586.html
Thelma
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Post by Thelma »

Did you know about the Bielskis? I didn't.

During World War II, the Bielskis, a trio of Jewish brothers, escaped to the Belarussian forest where, over the years, they were joined by citified Jews who knew how to quote the Talmud but not how to hold a hammer. Edward Zwick lays out this incredible true story in great detail: their creation of a community, the phenomenon of so-called “forest wives” and their reluctant and dangerous alliance with Russian troops.

They also had to survive the extreme cold, illness, the Nazis' superior force and, at times, each other.

Daniel Craig is strong, brave and gorgeous (but glammed down) as the leader of the group. Liev Schreiber is a bit theatrical but still effective as the hot-headed middle brother, while Jamie Bell (the grown-up Billy Eliot) is touching and forthright as the youngest. Together they saved more than 1,200 people, a list to rival Schindler's. And they did it under considerably more difficult circumstances.

“Defiance” is 20 minutes too long and it tries to tell too many stories. However, the central story—the one everyone should know and so few do—is an amazing one. At one point, a farmer who is helping the Bielskis asks why is it so hard to be friends with a Jew. Craig replies tersely, “Try being one.”

http://www.dailyreportonline.com/Editor ... 09%4028949
Laredo
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Post by Laredo »

I wonder if it really was a white horse because everyone is making such a big deal of it. I've been a bit confused about the ages of the brothers and the amount in the movie ( they only mention 3 in most of the stuff I read . I thought (Aron ?) was the youngest .
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Germangirl
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Post by Germangirl »

laredo wrote:I wonder if it really was a white horse because everyone is making such a big deal of it. I've been a bit confused about the ages of the brothers and the amount in the movie ( they only mention 3 in most of the stuff I read . I thought (Aron ?) was the youngest .
The white horse is historically correct.
The top notch acting in the Weisz/Craig/Spall 'Betrayal' is emotionally true, often v funny and its beautifully staged with filmic qualities..

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Thelma
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Post by Thelma »

laredo wrote:I wonder if it really was a white horse because everyone is making such a big deal of it. I've been a bit confused about the ages of the brothers and the amount in the movie ( they only mention 3 in most of the stuff I read . I thought (Aron ?) was the youngest .
4 brothers in the movie :)
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