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Colourised Auschwitz film hits heart and soul

Adding colour to footage filmed in the death camp has an extraordinary emotional impact, says Keren David

January 15, 2020 18:30
Two boys in Auschwitz

ByKeren David, Keren David

2 min read

It's a hard thing to confess, but for years I struggled to make an emotional connection to the victims of the Holocaust. Maybe it was self-protection, but the horrors felt too distant to comprehend. Sheldon Lazarus felt the same. For both of us, the 1993 film Schindler’s List was a turning point. “Afterwards, I stood in stunned silence, in tears,” he recalls. The emotional connection had been made. And the image that lingered was the little girl in red, the only splash of colour in Steven Spielberg’s black-and-white film.

Twenty-five years later, his 14-year-old daughter was studying the Shoah at school. He picked up her text book and realised that all the photographs in it were black and white. “It was hard for her to feel a connection.” Around the same time, Peter Jackson’s colourised documentary about the First World War had been released. Lazarus wondered why archive film of the Holocaust hadn’t been similarly updated. He had a conversation with someone high up in French television, and asked the question. “He told me ‘Because the French aren’t ready for it.’ I thought, well, we’re ready for it!”

So started the project to colourise footage of Auschwitz, which has led to a film — Auschwitz Untold in Colour — made by Fulwell73 where Lazarus is development producer.

The effect is extraordinary. The distancing effect of monochrome is lifted, and you can far more easily imagine yourself among the thronging crowd arriving at the death camp. It is chilling, compelling and extremely powerful. As well as the footage, the film features interviews with 16 survivors from Poland, France, the US and the UK. They include a Romany Holocaust survivor and a resistance fighter from Lithuania. In the UK it will screen on More4 and in the US on the History Channel.