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Out of the Ashes shows a different point of view of the Nazi Concentration Camps by showing the audiences an inside view of what was taking place. The normal image that stands out in people’s head is the illusion of Jews burning in the crematoriums or Jews being shot one by one. ... She would hide them during inspections and look out for the honest well-being of the women. ... Perl consumes as she reflects back because as she tells her story and the audience see what that story exactly entails, for example smothering a newborn, she begins to cry as she relives in and cries out to “Papa” and begs for forgiveness for the acts that she committed. ... This idea of allowing the women to live is logical because once they are free and out from under the concentration camps then the Jews and repopulate and defeat the whole purpose of the camps and Hitler would have failed his goal to extinguish all Jews. ... Often times the camera vision would want the audience to focus in on one character and it would blur out the rest of the scene except the person whose attention is being drawn to. ... Allowing extreme close-ups really shows the emotion and fear in the prisoner’s eyes and blurring out the surroundings show the significance of it.
Approximate Word count = 1096 Approximate Pages = 4.4 (250 words per page double spaced)
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