Activate your BLOCKBUSTER On Demand device

As Seen Through These Eyes (2007)

As Seen Through These Eyes (2007)
Member Rating:  
Hilary Helstein's documentary As Seen Through These Eyes travels back through the annals of history to witness an unusual, rarely-discussed, and deeply moving phenomenon: that of the Holocaust victims who clung tightly to their own sanity - and, in some cases, saved their own lives - by engaging in the act of raw creation (art, in other words, as a form of psychological and spiritual liberation). Helstein reminds the audience that while international art celebrities such as Pablo Picasso painted widely-seen works that accomplished the same ends (consider, for instance, his Guernica) many hordes of others, interned in the camps, engaged in the very same remarkable process. Overall, Helstein touches on, and explores, many related subtopics: beginning with a reference to Hitler's own protests against the Austrian artistic establishment that rejected him, she then moves into a discussion of intra-Holocaust art as a method of "bearing witness," and then expostulates on the fact that many Gestapo militia and Holocaust architects actually refrained from exterminating some Jews because of the artistic instincts and works generated by those individuals. Subsequently, Helstein lapses into a discussion of the more ghastly functions that art served in the Holocaust, such as the use of symphonic music to drive the sounds of screams out of ghastly halls, and Nazi artists' attempts to catch the look of insane agony on victims' faces amid satanic medical experiments by Mengele and others. Throughout, the documentarian includes numerous cutaways to the artistic works created during modern history's darkest period, to illustrate and bring life to her various points and themes. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

 Read More


Starring:
Maya Angelou
Director(s):
Hilary Helstein
 
 
 
 

Synopsis of As Seen Through These Eyes

Hilary Helstein's documentary As Seen Through These Eyes travels back through the annals of history to witness an unusual, rarely-discussed, and deeply moving phenomenon: that of the Holocaust victims who clung tightly to their own sanity - and, in some cases, saved their own lives - by engaging in the act of raw creation (art, in other words, as a form of psychological and spiritual liberation). Helstein reminds the audience that while international art celebrities such as Pablo Picasso painted widely-seen works that accomplished the same ends (consider, for instance, his Guernica) many hordes of others, interned in the camps, engaged in the very same remarkable process. Overall, Helstein touches on, and explores, many related subtopics: beginning with a reference to Hitler's own protests against the Austrian artistic establishment that rejected him, she then moves into a discussion of intra-Holocaust art as a method of "bearing witness," and then expostulates on the fact that many Gestapo militia and Holocaust architects actually refrained from exterminating some Jews because of the artistic instincts and works generated by those individuals. Subsequently, Helstein lapses into a discussion of the more ghastly functions that art served in the Holocaust, such as the use of symphonic music to drive the sounds of screams out of ghastly halls, and Nazi artists' attempts to catch the look of insane agony on victims' faces amid satanic medical experiments by Mengele and others. Throughout, the documentarian includes numerous cutaways to the artistic works created during modern history's darkest period, to illustrate and bring life to her various points and themes. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

Complete Cast of As Seen Through These Eyes


    Director(s):
    Hilary Helstein
    Writer(s):
    Hilary Helstein
    Producer(s):
    Amy JanesHilary HelsteinMichael Rosendale
    Looking for special editions of As Seen Through These Eyes?
    See All Versions
    Subtitles:
    Check All Versions
    Closed Captioning:
    Check All Versions
     
     
     
     

    BY MAIL

    We're sorry, this title is not available to rent or buy by mail.
     

    IN-STORE

     

    What's Your Take?

    Add to FavoritesIn Favorites  |  Share:     Email to a friendShare on FacebookShare on Twitter
    YOUR REVIEW
    WRITE A REVIEW
     
    1000 
     
    Member Reviews
     
    Read All 0 Reviews