Re-released in the US on Feb. 24, Marcel Ophuls' 4-hour 1969 film presents a riveting depiction of everyday life in Nazi-occupied France and is ultimately about human nature

'Filmmakers for the Prosecution,' playing in NYC through Feb. 2, shows how in the War Crimes Unit Budd and Stuart Schulberg helped convict top Nazis; Americans never saw their work

Made as a film school thesis project, 'NAKAM' is inspired by Motele Schlein, who was killed in a Nazi ambush, but whose violin survived as symbol of resistance and is still played

The three-part miniseries airing this week recognizes a part of WWII history many Americans are unfamiliar with - or would prefer not to know about

Distributors of Beautiful Blue Eyes again allowed to advertise film on social media site; Meta initially upholds ban, but later says was 'made in error'

Film features archival images and interviews from eight fighters who fled from persecution to battle German occupiers, countering narrative that Jews did not resist regime

Filmmakers explain why ‘The US And The Holocaust,’ which premieres on September 18, is not just another Holocaust film

Stephen Edwards, director of the new documentary 'Syndrome K' narrated by Ray Liotta, talks about uncovering a piece of history he calls 'the greatest elevator pitch in Hollywood'

Out on Aug. 19, a new film, 'Three Minutes - A Lengthening,' by Dutch filmmaker Bianca Stigter, looks in depth at recovered footage of a Polish town prior to its devastation

The film, now playing at New York’s Quad Cinema, is a dramatization of the true story of Sara Góralnik Shapiro, who disguised herself and worked for a family of Ukrainian farmers

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