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Based on the novel by John Byne, The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas is set in Germany during WWII and stars Asa Butterfield as eight-year-old Bruno, who is forced to move to the countryside with his mother (Vera Farmiga) and 12-year-old sister Greta (Amber Beattie) when their SS commandant father (David Thewlis) gets a job as the overseer to a concentration camp. Believing the camp to be a strange farm where everyone wears striped pyjamas, Bruno makes repeated visits to the camp’s perimeter, where he befriends a boy his age named Shmuel (Jack Scanlon) through the barbed wire fence.

Butterfield strikes exactly the right note as Bruno and there’s strong support from both Thewlis and Farmiga, while Beattie is both amusing and chilling as the Nazi-worshipping Greta. The dialogue is spoken in English, which thankfully avoids any dodgy German accents but also has the effect of making the film seem like a surreal play. The film is also beautifully shot, with striking cinematography courtesy of BenoĆ®t Delhomme and an effective score by James Horner.
That said, the film’s overly simplistic, child’s-eye-view approach might not work for everyone, because the film doesn’t really work unless you treat the story as a sort of storybook-style fable. To that end, it frequently recalls Roberto Benigni’s thematically similar (and equally divisive) Life Is Beautiful.
In short, The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas is an impressively directed and acted drama that packs a powerful emotional punch. Recommended.
credits: ViewLondon | Yahoo! Movies Singapore
Official Movie Poster![]() |
Singapore Date: 12th February 2009 Language: English Running Time: 93 mins Rating: PG Genre: Drama Tagline: A timeless story of innocence lost and humanity found. Starring: Cara Horgan, Gurinder Chadha, Zac Mattoon, Asa Butterfield, Vera Farmiga Directed by: Mark Herman Company: BBC Films Singapore Distributor: Buena Vista International iZone Rating: 8/10 |
sad: I M CRY IN THE MOVIE IS SO EXELENT
This movie was incredible. It was successfully depicted through a childs perspective and showed that not all children’s fables end happily. I love how it was realistic. I’d give this movie a 5/5.