Los Angeles Times

Review: 'Shoah: Four Sisters' marks the final chapter in Claude Lanzmann's decades-long chronicle to preserve the history of the Holocaust

Until almost the day he died, the Holocaust would not let Claude Lanzmann rest.

Even though the French director's 1985 "Shoah" has a running time of 9 1/2 hours, making it one of the longest documentaries ever, he was unhappy with the large amount of material he'd left out, stories and characters he felt were significant but that there simply hadn't been room for.

So starting with 1997's "A Visitor From the Living," Lanzmann mined his hundreds of hours of interviews to produce stand-alone documentaries

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times3 min read
At KTLA, Sam Rubin Was A Local Morning News Pioneer Who Covered Hollywood With Zeal
LOS ANGELES — KTLA entertainment reporter Sam Rubin was at the center of a local TV news revolution. Rubin, who died Friday of a heart attack at 64, became a central member of "KTLA 5 Morning News" soon after its launch on July 8. 1991. The early mor
Los Angeles Times4 min readAmerican Government
Jackie Calmes: Our Elections Have Integrity. These Politicians Do Not
Here they go again. Six months before election day, for the third straight presidential contest, Donald Trump and his Republican lickspittles are sounding alarms about virtually nonexistent voting fraud, laying the groundwork to claim that he wuz rob
Los Angeles Times4 min readCrime & Violence
Commentary: This Tough-on-crime Proposal Won’t Solve California Retail Theft, But It Would Crowd Our Prisons
California’s Proposition 47, a milestone in criminal justice reform, is under threat. The proposed Homelessness, Drug Addiction and Theft Reduction Act, which seeks to undo important aspects of Proposition 47, would take us backward to prioritize pun

Related Books & Audiobooks