Become a Member
Film

Boys-own Shoah story

Director Mark Herman switches from working-class dramas to the Holocaust.

September 12, 2008 11:36

By

Nick Johnstone,

Nick Johnstone

4 min read

Director Mark Herman switched from British working-class dramas, to the Holocaust with the Boy In Striped Pyjamas. Not everyone was pleased.


It was back in the summer of 2005 that Mark Herman, the Yorkshire-born writer/director, read an advance proof of a debut novel by Irish writer, John Boyne, called The Boy In The Striped Pyjamas. Set during the Second World War, the novel told the story of an improbable friendship between Bruno, the naïve eight-year-old German son of a Nazi commandant posted to run Auschwitz-Birkenau, and Shmuel, a Jewish boy of the same age, imprisoned in the camp.

Herman sneaked an early look at the book because he and Boyne were represented by the same talent agency. He was fascinated by the novel's child's-eye depiction of the moral impact on the wife and children of a high-ranking Nazi who come to realise what atrocities their husband and father is overseeing mere metres from their front door.

"What really attracted me was that it felt like a unique angle," says the 54-year-old director, whose previous work includes British hits Brassed Off, Purely Belter and Little Voice. "Obviously a child's point of view is not quite new, but I thought a German childhood point of view was a really interesting angle to take."

https://api.thejc.atexcloud.io/image-service/alias/contentid/173pr2sb8oza2v7mhbl/Boy-in-the-stripped-PJ_s.jpg%3Ff%3Ddefault%26%24p%24f%3Dff6a87a?f=3x2&w=732&q=0.6