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The Island on Bird Street
The Island on Bird Street

The Island on Bird Street (1997)

72% User Rating
1h 47min
Drama
War

Alex is an 11-year old boy who, during WWII, hides in the Jewish ghetto from Nazis after all his relatives have been sent to the concentration camp. The movie portrays the ghetto through his eyes.

Søren Kragh-JacobsenDirector

Cast

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Patrick Bergin

Patrick Bergin

Stefan

Jordan Kiziuk

Jordan Kiziuk

Alex

Jack Warden

Jack Warden

Boruch

James Bolam

James Bolam

Doctor Studjinsky

Michael Byrne

Michael Byrne

Bolek

Stefan Sauk

Stefan Sauk

Goehler

Suzanna Hamilton

Suzanna Hamilton

Stasya's Mother

Marek Grabowski

Marek Grabowski

Adam

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Marcin Herman

Joseph

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Paweł Lauterbach

Benny

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Jacek Milczanowski

Paweł Okoński

Paweł Okoński

Richter

Leon Niemczyk

Leon Niemczyk

Podolski

Jacek Krautforst

Jacek Krautforst

adjutant

Juliusz Chrząstowski

Juliusz Chrząstowski

jewish policeman

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Katarzyna Suszyło

Miriam

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Julita Wołoszyńska-Matysek

Benny's Mother

Maciej Sosnowski

Maciej Sosnowski

jewish policeman (uncredited)

Rafał Szałajko

Rafał Szałajko

ghetto Jew (uncredited)

Zbigniew Waleryś

Zbigniew Waleryś

ghetto Jew (uncredited)

Reviews (1)

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CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
Rating 70%

March 5, 2025

With the Nazis having reduced Warsaw to little more than rubble, the young “Alex” (Jordan Kiziuk) is separated from his family, who have been sent to a concentration camp, and is now forced to scavenge as best he can amongst the ruins. Fortunately, this is a resourceful young lad who quickly learns his way around the ghetto using the sewers and the attics to keep himself safe. That’s easier said than done as the water supply has been turned off and food is extremely scarce. There are still people in the city but with plenty prepared to turn him in for an apple or a loaf of bread, he has to be very wary of whom he can trust. His encounter with fellow refugees “Freddy” (Lee Ross) and “Henyrk” (Simon Gregor) alerts him to a way out of their squalid environment into safer parts but he still hopes for a reunion with his dad “Stefan” (Patrick Bergin) and for that to happen, however unlikely, he must risk remaining in a Jewish quarter that is being slowly demolished by the invaders. It’s a lot of responsibility for this young lad who really only has himself and his pet mouse “Snow” against perils around every corner, and Kiziuk holds that role together engagingly well. This film is also quite interesting in that it tells us the story from that child’s perspective which offers quite an affecting way to demonstrate both the brutishness of the soldiers and their indiscriminate thuggery as neither age nor sex made the slightest difference to the treatment they received. The production takes us deep into the infrastructure of “Ptasia Street” and into the psychology of both this boy and those he encounters as he must live his life by his guile and with some occasional goodwill, and though the brutality isn’t as graphic as in many similar stories, it is just as impactful. It’s quite compelling to watch and his choice of book - “Robinson Crusoe” rather sums the whole thing up.

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