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词条 Anne Frank: The Whole Story
释义

  1. Plot overview

  2. Cast

  3. Home media

  4. Reception

  5. Series Overview

  6. Episodes

  7. TV rating

  8. See also

  9. References

  10. External links

{{Infobox television
| show_name = Anne Frank: The Whole Story
| image = Anne Frank The Whole Story.jpg
| image_size =
| image_alt =
| caption = Promotional poster for the television film from American Broadcasting Company
| genre =
| creator =
| based_on = {{Based on|The Biography|{{nowrap|Melissa Müller}}}}
| writer =
| screenplay = Kirk Ellis
| story =
| director = Robert Dornhelm
| starring = Ben Kingsley
Brenda Blethyn
Lili Taylor
Hannah Taylor-Gordon
Tatjana Blacher
Joachim Król
Jessica Manley
Nicholas Audsley
Jan Niklas
| narrated =
| theme_music_composer = Graeme Revell
| country = UK / Czech / USA
| language = English, German, French, Spanish, Italian, Dutch
| num_seasons = 1
| num_episodes = 2
| list_episodes = #Episodes
| producer = David R. Kappes
Kirk Ellis
Hans Proppe
| editor = Christopher Rouse
Mark Fitzgerald (uncredited)
| cinematography = Elemér Ragályi
| runtime = 190 minutes
| company =
| distributor = American Broadcasting Company
| budget =
| network =
| first_aired = May 20
| last_aired = May 21, 2001
| preceded_by =
| followed_by =
| website =
}}

Anne Frank: The Whole Story is a two-part mini-series based on the book The Biography by Melissa Müller. The mini-series aired on ABC on May 20 and 21, 2001. The series starred Ben Kingsley, Brenda Blethyn, Hannah Taylor-Gordon, and Lili Taylor. Controversially, but in keeping with the claim made by Melissa Müller, the series asserts that the anonymous betrayer of the Frank family was the office cleaner, when in fact the betrayer's identity has never been established. A disagreement between the producers of the mini-series and the Anne Frank Foundation about validity of this and other details led to the withdrawal of their endorsement of the dramatization, which prevented the use of any quotations from the writings of Anne Frank appearing within the production. Hannah Taylor-Gordon received both Golden Globe and Emmy Award nominations for her performance as Anne Frank, while Ben Kingsley won a Screen Actors Guild Award for his performance as Otto Frank, Anne's father. It is revealed in the miniseries that the cleaning lady of Opekta betrayed Anne and her family.

Plot overview

In 1939, Anne Frank (Hannah Taylor-Gordon) realizes her world is beginning to change around her. Eventually, the Nazis invade the Netherlands. Anne becomes increasingly distressed as her rights are taken away, and her family is ominously being forced to register as Jews with the government and to wear yellow stars. She is then forced to leave her school and attend a Jewish lyceum, where she meets her new best friend, Jacqueline van Maarsen (Victoria Anne Brown), who is only half-Jewish. Anne also meets Hello Silberberg (Nicky Cantor), on whom she develops a crush; it is implied that Hello also reciprocates her feelings. On her 13th birthday, she receives the famous checkered-patterned diary and immediately goes to her room to write her first entry.

A few weeks later, on a normal Sunday in July 1942, Margot (Jessica Manley), Anne's sister, receives a call-up from the Germans to be deported to a "labor camp" in the East. Otto Frank (Ben Kingsley) moves his family into the now-renowned "Secret Annex", followed soon by Hermann and Auguste van Pels (Joachim Krol and Brenda Blethyn), their son Peter (Nicholas Audsley), and Fritz Pfeffer (Jan Niklas), the Frank family's dentist. During their stay in the annex, the Van Pels family members are noted for their constant bickering. Fritz becomes Anne's antagonist, and Anne has her first serious relationship with Peter, from whom she receives her first kiss. All the while, she wishes for an end to the war. Anne also gets her first period while in the annex - an occasion that she had been anxiously awaiting. One night a thief breaks into the building below the annex, leaving the eight refugees in terror.

Eventually, on August 4, 1944, the Franks are denounced by Lena Hartog (Veronica Nowag-Jones), the cleaning lady of the business in which the annex resides. The eight people in the hiding are arrested and Anne's diary is dumped onto the floor while SS man Karl Silberbauer searches for hoarded money. Two of the helpers (of those in the Secret Annex) are also arrested. In conversation with Otto, Silberbauer is stunned to learn that he served as an officer in the Imperial German Army during World War I. Silberbauer laments that, if they had not gone into hiding, Otto and his family would have received decent treatment.

Afterwards, the Franks are sent on a train to Westerbork, a transit camp, where Anne, her family and friends are held in the criminal "S Barracks". There, Anne meets a woman, Janny Brandes-Brilleslijper (Klára Issová) and her sister Lientje (Zdeňka Volencová), who are later seen with Anne in Bergen-Belsen. Anne also befriends the camp's schoolteacher (Jaroslava Siktancova), who often invites Anne to the camp school to tell the students stories. (One of them is Mrs. Quackenbush, a story that Anne had written before going into hiding, and had been assigned to write by her math teacher as punishment for repeatedly talking in class)

Anne and her family are soon transported to Auschwitz, where the women are stripped of their clothing and their hair is shorn. She is sadly separated from her father and the other men. During a selection for women in the camp to go to a safer place to work in a munitions factory, Anne's mother and sister are chosen, but Anne is not. Therefore, Edith and Margot choose to remain behind. Anne and Margot are sent to a scabies barracks and later deported to Bergen-Belsen, which is no more than many large tents on a muddy ground surrounded by an electric fence. Mrs. Van Pels eventually arrives at the camp to find Anne very thin and Margot sick with typhus. One night Anne sees her old friend, Hannah (Jade Williams), through the fence. Hannah is a privileged prisoner and tells Anne that her father is dying but her sister is alive. She throws a package with bread and socks over to Anne.

In the last scene with Anne, a fevered Margot and Anne speak of the days before they went to Bergen-Belsen. They go to sleep. The next morning, Anne opens her eyes, and hears birds outside. She nudges Margot to show her, but Margot doesn't wake up, and instead falls out of bed onto the ground. Anne realizes that Margot is dead, and lifts her eyes to the sky, her will defeated.

After the war in 1945, it is revealed that Otto is, in fact, alive. He looks for information about his daughters, but has no luck in doing so until he is directed to find Janny Brandes, who survived the camp. Otto is told that Anne died a few days after Margot. Miep Gies (Lili Taylor), who helped the Franks hide, gives Anne's preserved diary to Otto. Otto reads it all. He then goes up to the now empty annex and photos. He collapses in a crying heap in front of Anne's wall, which is still plastered with movie stars. An epilogue is then shown which describes what happened to everyone mentioned in the story.

Cast

{{Cast listing|
  • Hannah Taylor-Gordon as Anne Frank
  • Jessica Manley as Margot Frank
  • Tatjana Blacher as Edith Frank
  • Ben Kingsley as Otto Frank
  • Joachim Król as Hermann van Pels
  • Brenda Blethyn as Auguste van Pels
  • Nicholas Audsley as Peter van Pels
  • Jan Niklas as Fritz Pfeffer
  • Branka Katic as Charlotte Kaletta
  • Lili Taylor as Miep Gies
  • Rob Das as Jan Gies
  • Peter Bolhuis as Victor Kugler
  • Johannes Silberschneider as Johannes Kleiman
  • Ela Lehotska (acting) and Suzanne Friedline (voice) as Bep Voskuijl
  • Jade Williams as Hanne Goslar
  • Dominique Horwitz as Hans Goslar
  • Victoria Anne Brown as Jacqueline van Maarsen
  • Cees Geel as Wilhelm van Maaren
  • Jeff Caster as Lammert Hartog
  • Klára Issová as Janny Brandes-Brilleslijper
  • Robert Russell as Mr. Keesing
  • Michaela Horakova as Susanne "Sanne" Ledermann
  • Holger Daemgen as Karl Silberbauer

}}

Home media

Anne Frank: The Whole Story was released on VHS and DVD on August 28, 2001 by Buena Vista Home Entertainment. The only difference between the DVD and VHS version of this movie is trailer of South Pacific on the DVD.

Reception

Anne Frank: The Whole Story earned critical acclaim from critics and viewers. The New York Post called the mini-series "undeniably powerful"{{Citation needed|date=August 2012}}, whereas others deemed it "a stunning tribute".{{Citation needed|date=August 2012}} This adaptation has been named as "the best Anne Frank movie or mini-series yet."{{by whom|date=November 2011}} It was nominated for three Golden Globes, and won the Emmy Award for the Best Miniseries and a 2001 Peabody Award.[1]

Series Overview

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"


|-
SeasonEpisodesOriginally aired
|-
First aired Last aired
|-
|style="background:#000000;"|
|List of Anne Frank:The Whole Story Episodes#Season 1 (2001)|1
|2
|{{Start date|2001|5|20}}
|{{End date|2001|5|21}}
|}

Episodes

No. in
series
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air dateProduction
code
U.S. viewers
(in millions){{Episode list
EpisodeNumber = 1 Title = Part 1 DirectedBy = Robert Dornhelm WrittenBy = Kirk Ellis2001|5|20}} ProdCode = 101 Viewers = ShortSummary = In 1939, Anne Frank (Hannah Taylor-Gordon) realizes her world is beginning to change around her. Eventually, the Nazis invade the Netherlands. Anne becomes increasingly distressed as her rights are taken away, and her family is ominously being forced to register as Jews with the government and to wear yellow stars. She is then forced to leave her school and attend a Jewish lyceum, where she meets her new best friend, Jacqueline van Maarsen (Victoria Anne Brown), who is only half-Jewish. Anne also meets Hello Silberberg (Nicky Cantor), on whom she develops a crush; it is implied that Hello also reciprocates her feelings. On her 13th birthday, she receives the famous checkered-patterned diary and immediately goes to her room to write her first entry.

A few weeks later, on a normal Sunday in July 1942, Margot (Jessica Manley), Anne's sister, receives a call-up from the Germans to be deported to a "labor camp" in the East. Otto Frank (Ben Kingsley) moves his family into the now-renowned "Secret Annex", followed soon by Hermann and Auguste van Pels (Joachim Krol and Brenda Blethyn), their son Peter (Nicholas Audsley), and Fritz Pfeffer (Jan Niklas), the Frank family's dentist. During their stay in the annex, the Van Pels family members are noted for their constant bickering. Fritz becomes Anne's antagonist, and Anne has her first serious relationship with Peter, from whom she receives her first kiss. All the while, she wishes for an end to the war. Anne also gets her first period while in the annex - an occasion that she had been anxiously awaiting. One night a thief breaks into the building below the annex, leaving the eight refugees in terror.

LineColor = 000000

}}

{{Episode list
EpisodeNumber = 2 Title = Part 2 DirectedBy = Robert Dornhelm WrittenBy = Kirk Ellis2001|5|21}} ProdCode = 102 Viewers = ShortSummary = Eventually, on August 4, 1944, the Franks are denounced by Lena Hartog (Veronica Nowag-Jones), the cleaning lady of the business in which the annex resides. The eight people in the hiding are arrested and Anne's diary is dumped onto the floor while SS man Karl Silberbauer searches for hoarded money. Two of the helpers (of those in the Secret Annex) are also arrested. In conversation with Otto, Silberbauer is stunned to learn that he served as an officer in the Imperial German Army during World War I. Silberbauer laments that, if they had not gone into hiding, Otto and his family would have received decent treatment.

Afterwards, the Franks are sent on a train to Westerbork, a transit camp, where Anne, her family and friends are held in the criminal "S Barracks". There, Anne meets a woman, Janny Brandes-Brilleslijper (Klára Issová) and her sister Lientje (Zdeňka Volencová), who are later seen with Anne in Bergen-Belsen. Anne also befriends the camp's schoolteacher (Jaroslava Siktancova), who often invites Anne to the camp school to tell the students stories. (One of them is Mrs. Quackenbush, a story that Anne had written before going into hiding, and had been assigned to write by her math teacher as punishment for repeatedly talking in class). Anne and her family are soon transported to Auschwitz, where the women are stripped of their clothing and their hair is shorn. She is sadly separated from her father and the other men. During a selection for women in the camp to go to a safer place to work in a munitions factory, Anne's mother and sister are chosen, but Anne is not. Therefore, Edith and Margot choose to remain behind. Anne and Margot are sent to a scabies barracks and later deported to Bergen-Belsen, which is no more than many large tents on a muddy ground surrounded by an electric fence. Mrs. Van Pels eventually arrives at the camp to find Anne very thin and Margot sick with typhus. One night Anne sees her old friend, Hannah (Jade Williams), through the fence. Hannah is a privileged prisoner and tells Anne that her father is dying but her sister is alive. She throws a package with bread and socks over to Anne.

In the last scene with Anne, a fevered Margot and Anne speak of the days before they went to Bergen-Belsen. They go to sleep. The next morning, Anne opens her eyes, and hears birds outside. She nudges Margot to show her, but Margot doesn't wake up, and instead falls out of bed onto the ground. Anne realizes that Margot is dead, and lifts her eyes to the sky, her will defeated.

After the war in 1945, it is revealed that Otto is, in fact, alive. He looks for information about his daughters, but has no luck in doing so until he is directed to find Janny Brandes, who survived the camp. Otto is told that Anne died a few days after Margot. Miep Gies (Lili Taylor), who helped the Franks hide, gives Anne's preserved diary to Otto. Otto reads it all. He then goes up to the now empty annex and photos. He collapses in a crying heap in front of Anne's wall, which is still plastered with movie stars. An epilogue is then shown which describes what happened to everyone mentioned in the story.

Note: Anne's diary was published 2 years after she died at Bergen-Belsen by her father known as The Diary of a Young Girl.

LineColor = 000000
}}

TV rating

The production was rated TV-14 for concentration camp depictions, including brief nudity. The brief nudity takes place where Anne, Margot, Edith, and Mrs. Van Pels get their heads shaved at Auschwitz and are disinfected. There are also some disturbing images, including dead bodies.

See also

{{Portal|Film|Judaism|World War II|Netherlands}}
  • List of Holocaust films
  • List of films about Anne Frank
  • List of television films produced for American Broadcasting Company

References

1. ^61st Annual Peabody Awards, May 2002.

External links

  • {{IMDb title|0246430}}
{{Cultural depictions of Anne Frank}}{{EmmyAward Limited Series}}{{Authority control}}

20 : 2001 American television series debuts|2001 American television series endings|Films about Anne Frank|American Broadcasting Company network shows|2000s American television miniseries|Biographical films about writers|Films based on biographies|Films directed by Robert Dornhelm|Films set in the 1930s|Films set in the 1940s|Peabody Award-winning television programs|Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Miniseries winners|Biographical films about children|Holocaust films|Films scored by Graeme Revell|Films shot in the Czech Republic|Czech films|Czech television films|Czech war films|The Holocaust in television

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