Verzaubert (found documentary on LGBTQ+ Holocaust survivors; 1993): Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "{{InfoboxLost |title=<center>Verzaubert ('Enchanted') </center> |image=Verzaubert.jpg |imagecaption=Film Poster |status=<span style="color:orange;">'''Lost'''</span> }} ''Verz...")
 
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{{InfoboxLost
{{InfoboxLost
|title=<center>Verzaubert ('Enchanted')
|title=<center>Verzaubert ('Enchanted')</center>
</center>
|image=Verzaubert.jpg
|image=Verzaubert.jpg
|imagecaption=Film Poster
|imagecaption=The Film Poster for ''Verzaubert''
|status=<span style="color:orange;">'''Lost'''</span>
|status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span>
}}
}}
''Verzaubert'', also known as ''Enchanted'' to English-speaking audiences, is a lost 1993 documentary telling the stories of gay and lesbian survivors of Nazism and the Holocaust. A German film site<ref>https://www.spielfilm.de/filme/2989062/verzaubert</ref> describes that the survivors "tell of their first secret romances, subpoenas by the moral police and the Gestapo, camouflage, pink corners, persecution and annihilation, subculture and their everyday life." The site goes on to describe specific sequences from the film, "For example, Edith, who ran a coffee and jam business for 38 years with her friend. Or Rudolf, who had his happiest time when he was allowed to play female roles at the front theater in the Second World War. The interviews do not attempt to replicate a previously "forgotten" chapter of historiography, but rather letting gays and lesbians speak for themselves with their very different life experiences and stories." (both quotations translated from German)  
'''''Verzaubert''''' (aka ''Enchanted'' in English) is a lost 1993 documentary telling the stories of gay and lesbian survivors of Nazism and the Holocaust. A German film site describes that the survivors "tell of their first secret romances, subpoenas by the moral police and the Gestapo, camouflage, pink corners, persecution and annihilation, subculture and their everyday life."<ref>[https://www.spielfilm.de/filme/2989062/verzaubert German film site that talks about ''Verzaubert''.] Retrieved 23 Aug '19</ref> The site goes on to describe specific sequences from the film, "For example, Edith, who ran a coffee and jam business for 38 years with her friend. Or Rudolf, who had his happiest time when he was allowed to play female roles at the front theater in the Second World War. The interviews do not attempt to replicate a previously "forgotten" chapter of historiography, but rather letting gays and lesbians speak for themselves with their very different life experiences and stories." (both quotations translated from German)  


The film is known to have a runtime of 83 minutes and was a project put together by nine different German directors.
The film is known to have a runtime of 83 minutes and was a project put together by nine different German directors.
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==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}
[[Category:Lost films]]
[[Category:Completely lost media]]

Revision as of 18:59, 8 May 2020

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This article has been tagged as Needing work due to its lack of content.



Verzaubert.jpg

The Film Poster for Verzaubert

Status: Lost

Verzaubert (aka Enchanted in English) is a lost 1993 documentary telling the stories of gay and lesbian survivors of Nazism and the Holocaust. A German film site describes that the survivors "tell of their first secret romances, subpoenas by the moral police and the Gestapo, camouflage, pink corners, persecution and annihilation, subculture and their everyday life."[1] The site goes on to describe specific sequences from the film, "For example, Edith, who ran a coffee and jam business for 38 years with her friend. Or Rudolf, who had his happiest time when he was allowed to play female roles at the front theater in the Second World War. The interviews do not attempt to replicate a previously "forgotten" chapter of historiography, but rather letting gays and lesbians speak for themselves with their very different life experiences and stories." (both quotations translated from German)

The film is known to have a runtime of 83 minutes and was a project put together by nine different German directors.

Still Images

References