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5/10
Nice but ruined with present day social justice
unicornssparkles16 August 2022
Warning: Spoilers
I thought they did the Anne Frank portion really nicely with her story and legacy, but I found the present-day part with Kitty, Peter and the refugees and their whole story really annoying and unnecessary.

Firstly, the romance between Kitty and Peter was really annoying and unnecessary, as this did not fit into or have anything to do with the story of Anne Frank, just seeming to be put there for the sake of including a romance (and of course because his name was also Peter just like Anne's Peter), because of course everything has to include a romance in now. It made no sense given they'd just seemingly known each other for a few days, if that, and suddenly Peter is claiming he is in love with her! Speaking of Peter, I found it really annoying how we were actually supposed to like him yet he steals of lots of people, being shown to pickpocket the wallets of all the visitors in the Anne Frank house, something which is never addressed or resolved, as he never shows any remorse for this or redeems this at all, with the film just being like "Who cares if he stole loads of people's money, he loves Kitty!" So I did not like Peter at all and his romance with Kitty and was annoyed that we were actually supposed to, like he's horrible to everyone else but Kitty, yet we're just supposed to like him simply because he loves Kitty, as who cares about everyone else losing their money?!

I also found the whole part nearer the end with the refugees really annoying, as it seemed like they were trying to cram too many social justice issues in at once, as well as this taking away the initial focus of the Anne Frank story. It just became way too preachy, and Kitty became increasingly irritating and annoying with her sudden preachy attitude, the way she actually threatened to burn Anne Frank's diary unless the police stopped trying to deport the refugees. This was just absolutely ridiculous and way too much, and Kitty was just very irritating as a character like this, as the film seemed to stray away from the focus of Anne Frank and WW2 and instead focus on all these other social justice themes of refugee-ism and focus on being preachy and extreme protesting, which had nothing to do with Anne Frank. It also really undermined and was rather disrespectful to the story of Anne Frank and WW2, as while refugee-ism is clearly a major concern, it is really wrong to actually compare it to the Jewish holocaust, where millions of jews were killed. The preaching and extreme protesting was a really contemporary thing that made no sense for Kitty, who has just awoken from the 1940s, to suddenly be doing.

I also found Kitty really irritating when she was making that preachy speech and protest to dismiss people for simply worshipping Anne Frank through naming buildings and everything after her, as that's not what Anne wanted, but rather to save children and families, when nobody was claiming to worship her, they were simply naming these places after her to create a legacy for her. It was also stupid the way she said that's not the message Anne was sending in her diary, as Anne never intended to send any message in her diary, given it was private.

I enjoyed the initial focus on Anne Frank's story and WW2, and the concept of her imaginary friend awakening in present day after over 70 years and finding out about Anne Frank's legacy seemed like an interesting one, but it would've been so much better if they hadn't made the Kitty character so irritating, preachy and unlikable, as well as if they hadn't included this horrible "bad boy" guy as a love interest who actually "LOVES" her too, and of course the whole contemporary social justice themes of preachiness and protesting and the issue with the refugees.
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6/10
Interesting but skip the last 20 minutes
ronaldaloni13 June 2022
A new angle on the famous story with beautiful animation and spirit. But the movie turns into preaching for the last 20 minutes comparing the holocaust to the immigration crisis in Europe, both humanitarian crisis, but completely different in nature and scale.
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5/10
I just don't quite think it works, sadly.
Jeremy_Urquhart30 August 2023
I was keen to check this out, because Waltz with Bashir (2008) is one of my all-time favourite films, and I also quite liked Ari Folman's previous film, The Congress (2013). Where is Anne Frank doesn't quite work though, not even coming close to Folman's 2008 film quality-wise and also proving a bit disappointing compared to his 2013 film.

The tone is just very strange, and the storytelling feels a tad awkward, even if the premise sounds like it could work on paper. I can't imagine kids finding this to be particularly engaging, and adults are just going to feel a bit like they're being talked down to.

Aspects of the presentation are interesting- the music kind of stood out, and not in a bad way. I was mixed on the animation overall, though. I don't think it was utilised as well here as it had been in Forman's previous animated/half-animated movies.

I have to admire the film trying to tell a dark historical story in a way that's technically family-friendly, but keeping younger/older viewers actually engaged is a whole other matter. I think this is where the film falters, regardless of whether you're judging it as a family film or one that older audiences can watch and feel invested in.

This proved to be a disappointment, but at least it wasn't a total failure, and there are some things of merit here that can be somewhat appreciated.
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7/10
Brilliant way to « remember »
aydarnicolas19 December 2021
This movie is not afraid to mix a lot of ideas to remember the spirit of Anne Frank. The idea is to keep alive a war against racism and intolerance in a modern and brilliant movie. The animation is amazing and the way it represents nazism is absolutely beautiful and horrifying. Maybe I disagree a lot when I see parallels between Europeans Cops and nazis, so the movie is not perfect as was Congress. But maybe to show to the young generation when our aged grand parents will disappear with the memory of this horrible war.
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6/10
A sensitive and brooding cartoon movie with traditional and bright drawings
ma-cortes1 April 2023
Kitty, the imaginary girl who Anne Frank wrote to in her 1940s diary during WWII, seeks out the deceased diarist while also inspiring a wave of modern social justice for refugees. As Kitty embarks on a journey to find Anne, who she believes is still alive, in today's Europe . Although the young girl is impressed by the vicissitudes of the modern world, she is also surprised by the legacy that Anne has left behind.

A well-intentioned movie but with a silly plot about Anne Frank's friend Kitty who steals Anne's diary in order to achieve a just cause so that immigrants from the Netherlands are not deported to their home countries. The film follows the journey of Kitty, the imaginary friend to whom Anne Frank dedicated her diary. The animation style of the film is very delicate , but the interaction established between the Holocaust and the current situation of the emigrants seems somewhat forced although, of course, necessary . The protagonists are a fiery teenager, Kitty , who wakes up in the near future in Anne Frank's house in Amsterdam , as the young girl is shocked by the modern world, she also comes across Anne's legacy and Anne Frank herself.

While hesitating for a time to accept the challenge posed to him by the Anne Frank Foundation, Folman has made several outstanding artistic decisions to emerge well from a journey of more than a decade. Folman was born in Haifa, Israel. He is a writer and director, known for The Congress (2013), Walz with Bashir (2008) and Clara Hakedosha (1996).

There're several biographic remarks about Anne Frank :nnelies Marie Frank was born on June 12, 1929 in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. Her parents were Otto and Edith Frank. For the first five years of her life, Anne lived with her parents and Margot, her older sister, in an apartment on the outskirts of Frankfurt. After the Nazis came to power in 1933, Otto Frank fled to Amsterdam, in the Netherlands, where he had business contacts. The rest of the Frank family soon followed, Anne being the last to arrive in February 1934 because she had stayed with her grandparents in Aachen. The fate of the Franks and other Amsterdam Jews was marked by the German occupation of the city. City, which began in May 1940. In early 1942, the Germans began preparations to deport Jews from the Netherlands to killing centers in the east. At that time, they demanded that all Dutch Jews be concentrated in Amsterdam. They also decided to intern all non-Dutch Jews in the Westerbork transit camp. From Westerbork, German officials deported Jews to the killing centers at Auschwitz-Birkenau and Sobibor in German-occupied Poland. The first deportation transport left Westerbork on July 15, 1942, bound for Auschwitz-Birkenau. These deportations and the intensification of anti-Semitic measures alarmed many Jews in the Netherlands, among whom were the Franks. Anne and her family decided to go into hiding in the first 15 days of July 1942. They were later joined by four other Jews: Hermann, Auguste and Peter van Pels, as well as Fritz Pfeffer. For two years, they all lived in a secret apartment at 263 Prinsengracht. The apartment was behind the commercial offices where Otto Frank had worked as a company manager. In her diary, Ana refers to the hideout as the "secret annex". Johannes Kleiman, Victor Kugler, Johan Voskuijl, Bep Voskuijl, Jan Gies and Miep Gies, who were friends and colleagues of Otto Frank, helped set up the hideout and smuggled food and clothing to the Franks, risking their own lives. During the time they were in hiding, Ana kept a journal where she wrote about her fears, hopes, and experiences. Then there takes place Arrest and deportation. On August 4, 1944, the German SS and police discovered the hideout. Authorities had long been believed to have acted on a tip from an anonymous Dutchman, but a more recent theory found that the Germans discovered the hideout by chance while investigating reports of illegal work being done in the house and they committed fraud with the ration coupons.
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6/10
"Where Is Anne Frank" written by Gregory Mann
gregorymannpress-7476210 December 2021
"Where is Anne Frank"

"Where is Anne Frank" begins with a miracle, Kitty (Ruby Stokes), the imaginary friend to whom Anne Frank (Emily Carey) writes in her famous Diary, comes to life in present-day Amsterdam. Unaware that 75 years have gone by, Kitty is convinced that if she's alive, then Anne must be alive too. It's the beginning of an adventurous journey. It's the story of Kitty's quest across contemporary Europe searching for her beloved friend. Armed with the precious Diary and with help from her friend Peter (Sebastian Croft), who runs a secret shelter for undocumented refugees, Kitty follows Anne's traces from the Annex to her tragic end in the 'Holocaust'. Disoriented by our broken world and the injustices that child refugees endure, Kitty wants to replace Anne's cause. Through her honesty, she presents a message of hope and generosity addressed to future generations.

Kitty is the leading role and the protagonist of the movie. What happened to Anne during the end of the war. How did she die? In doing so, she also discovers the current situation in Europe, with refugees from all over the world, running away from war zones. Another two conditions are to connect past and present time and to follow the last 7 dreadful months of Anne Frank's life. Kitty has always been there. But just in the Diary and not as an actual person. Anne Frank has left us many descriptions of Kitty, who she's, what she looks like, what kind of personality she's. And of course, there's her dialogue with Kitty. The movie makes Kitty into an alter ego of Anne. She's not under the control of parents who set her limits, as Anne was. For Kitty, there are no fellow inhabitants in her hideout criticising her. She's therefore free to do whatever Anne had wanted to do in her own imagination. In the movie Kitty becomes an activist for refugees in the present day. She's a part of new, political youth movements about climate and human rights. She's indeed a child of our times.

The character of Kitty started out as Anne's imaginary friend, basically. But in the movie she's building a bridge between the past and the present. As she ventures out into the world, she meets young people such as herself who are in danger, maybe because they've to run away from war zones. That reminds Kitty of Anne and the fact that Anne did not have an opportunity to run away during her relatively short time in hiding. This experience turns Kitty into an activist. At the same time, she realises her powers to promote a movement for children's rights. And these powers grow from her being a visitor in our world. Alongside Kitty, audiences confront the 'Holocaust'. The character of Kitty is not meant to be an extension or a rebirth of Anne's personality after her death. As Kitty leaves the house and ventures forth into the world, she has her own options. The Diary casts the relationship between Anne and her sister Margot (Skye Bennett), her mother Edith (Samantha Spiro) and Albert Dussel (Andrew Woodall) in a negative way in some respects. The one scene where the Frank family arrives at the Auschwitz concentration camp is the hardest task in the whole movie.

Shortly after Otto Frank (Michael Maloney) published the Diary of his daughter Anne Frank in 1947, he decides to have it adapted for stage. The success of the Broadway show 'The Diary Of A Young Girl' (1956) followed by the Oscar winning movie by George Stevens is the beginning of the success of the Diary to ensure that all royalties are used to support charitable and educational work, Otto Frank established the 'Anne Frank Fonds' in Basel in 1963, which he appoints his universal heir. Against this background the foundation initiated the animation movie in which Anne Frank's imaginary friend comes to life. The movie represents an introduction to lessons of history, the 'Holocaust', discrimination and anti-Semitism.

"Where is Anne Frank" is a 'Holocaust' movie. It's a new dimension to tell the 'Holocaust' story. But our minds are incapable of creating a visual connection to these stories and cannot fully grasp what happened. Sure, animation lets you reinvent the world. But the movie decides at the outset to break with a certain pattern of the genre. Most war movies show the present in colour and the past as monochrome. "Anne Frank" goes the opposite way. Therefore, in the movie present-day Amsterdam is depicte in monochrome colours, the city is in wintertime and has been completely drained of colour. On the other hand, the past is seen through the eyes of Anne, it's very lively, colourful and rich in tones. If you has to tell such a harsh story, you can work either with humour or a lot of emotions. But if you exaggerate and force the audience to delve into tired clichés of agony and woe, you risk losing your viewers. You must maintain an even-handedness while showing human aspects of the characters and avoid overplaying emotions and turning to gimmicks. You've to present a new, entirely different approach to the Diary, which is fairly well known among young audiences. Scenes unfolding in the past are telling the story of the Diary and even the future beyond the 'Holocaust' has been anticipated in the Diary to a certain extent. But the movie tells the story in a different way, namely not as a monologue by Anne, but as a dialogue between the girls. For us, the imaginary friend has become real and they're discussing among themselves what Anne has written down as her monologue.

It's not only about the 'Holocaust', which must of course never be forgotten, but also about the lessons that we can take from it for our own life. So it's not only a matter of looking back at what happened then, but also to see what's essential about the Diary and it's message for the new generation. The educational programme looks at the 'Holocaust', Jews, anti-Semitism, but also at children's rights, migration and refugees today. The movie deals with these topics at a time when this is urgently needed again. But this story is missing the horrible fates of those who starved in the ghettoes or who were deported in trains towards the East into the 'Final Solution'. When it comes to the past, these elements are dramatic, they originate from, or are based on the original text in the Diary. What's shown in the movie is what arises from reading the text and from what Anne Frank wrote about her dreams, emotions and wishes. Although the par about the 'Holocaust' is not in the Diary. Reading the Diary without putting it into the context of the present is meaningless as we need to learn the lessons of the past to make a difference. Children are still running away from war zones and their lives are in danger, minorities, refugees and individuals are still discriminated against.

Written by Gregory Mann.
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7/10
Ari Folman made this Holocaust movies for GEN Z
ongoam28 September 2022
This movie was a Magical Realism about Anne Frank Imaginary friend named Kitty, who wakes up in the Modern Day Amsterdam. The film tells the story of Anne and Kitty in the Netherland during the Nazi Occupation and the 21st Century of the Netherland. I know about Anne Frank, and I have a Book that Anne Wrote when she was in a Safehouse during the Nazi Occupation of the Netherland. The Story of Annes Frank was tragic, she died in the Nazi's Death Camp, and I know that we should say that War is Hell. I love this movie because the film tells the story of Shoah to the Our Generation. And I think so that I will recommended this movies to watch and I gave this movies to 7/10.
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8/10
Almost perfect
ayoreinf9 May 2022
This is a very good movie, and I really liked it. So rating it just 8 stars is, as far as I'm concerned, plain shame. But there are two very annoying faults standing between this movie and the perfect mark.

I mean, it is beautifully animated and acted. The two leads are simply wonderful. Namely Emily Carey as Anne Frank really feels like the girl who survived two years in a hidden apartment, stuck with her own family, another family and a crude dentist. And Ruby Stokes is perfect as the temperamental imaginary friend created by Anne Frank as a literary ploy in order not to speak with herself in her now famous diary. In fact I also loved the idea of the movie using this imaginary friend as a bridge between present day Europe and the days when the actual diary was written and it worked superbly almost all the way through.

And then we reach the ending and the perfect movie is turning all of a sudden from deep and thought provoking into simplistic attempt to solve the entire international refugees problem with a wave of a hand and a few brush strokes. And it also commits the sin of turning too preachy, as if it doesn't trust the viewers to get its point without having it spelled out in plain words. The movie didn't need this bluntness it was working so well without it.
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4/10
Ruined by the ending
Horst_In_Translation28 January 2023
Warning: Spoilers
"Where is Anne Frank" is a co-production between a total of five European countries, including the entirety of Benelux, and, as a consequence, this is a film in the English language like most others coming out these days. This premiered already back in 2021, so the movie is getting closer to the age of two years now. The big name attached to it is of course Israeli writer and director Ari Folman. It has been almost a decade now since his previous theatrical release "The Congress" and even longer since the Oscar-nominated "Waltz with Bashir". I liked the latter and loved the former, so I was surely curious about the quality of his newest release. As you can see from my rating, I found it underwhelming. I will go into detail soon what I disliked about it or actually you can already see it from the title of my review, but for now, let's look at the basics: This is of course an animated movie, just like Folman's previous two were. Given the subject, he left out big special effects this time, but kept the looks fairly essential. As a consequence, the outcome looks like a film that could have been from several years ago, if not decades. The movie runs for 95 minutes including credits. It looks as if it might have been a pretty personal subject for Folman. The time gap between this film and his last can be explained by him working on this movie for a long, long time. He was present during the German premiere last night and talked a bit about it. Also, you will read in the closing credits that there was a close connection between Anne Frank and his own parents back in the day during the latter days of World War II. As for Folman, with this project being always in production over the last decade, he was working a lot on television content as well.

There are beautiful women, but no big international names part of the voice cast here. This should surprise nobody really. Folman has had success in the United States, but this is not even an American co-production, let alone a Hollywood movie. As of now, maybe the biggest name from the cast is Emily Carey thanks to the recent Game of Thrones spinoff. Obviously, this was not safe though when she recorded for this one here, but good for her. She voiced the title character here, even if Anna is only the biggest supporting player in the movie or you could probably also make a case for her being a lesser lead than Kitty too, even if the latter was Anne's own creation. The film scored solid awards recognition mostly in Europe, especially with the nomination for a European Film Award. It is a very European movie indeed. As a consequence, it should not really surprise that it crucially elaborates on one of the tensest European subjects for years now: the refugee crisis. I wish it wouldn't have. As a consequence, it felt like mainstream, but sacrificed artistic integrity for it and for me the ending ruined the film pretty much. Major disappointment. The message there was in an even more unpleasant manner what you are constantly served by the mass media etc. Here for years now. I feel bad for the legacy of Anne Frank that her name was used for this and especially questionable also that this is supported by the Anne Frank Fonds and the museum depicted in this film. Quite a travesty if we put things into perspective in terms of refugees: Back then, millions of people, even millions of kids were murdered because of misguided ideology. A contender for the darkest hour in human existence. What we have today with the refugee crisis is nothing to be proud of either, but the dimensions are just the absolute opposite and should not be mentioned in reference to each other, especially with people not fleeing from anything, but moving towards a better life are declared fugitives nowadays too. No offense to the actual refugees though, the ones whose lives or at least whose freedom is threatened. They are the ones I actually feel for. This is why such an inclusion at the end was just a very negative factor for me.

What was even worse, was the idea of how crime is depicted as justified if it serves a certain purpose. I cannot agree there. Stealing the book to overcome existing regulations in terms of immigration is a complete no-go. Okay, we can make the argument that Kitty herself is the book and she left by choice, but still there is a sour aftertaste, especially if we look at how this is about culture. The film itself calls the book the country's biggest cultural treasure since Rembrandt. I would also be very careful with depicting the idea of burning books in a movie that is dealing with this subject. It was ironic in a really uncomfortable fashion and in my head there was also a connection to these self-proclaimed environmentalists ruining priceless cultural treasures in museums nowadays. Okay, that is another subject, but the agenda these days is the same and is fueled by the same people. In the light of all this, I feel almost generous when giving the outcome here two stars out of five. Just one would not have been inaccurate either. Luckily, the film only goes really to the dogs in the last 20 minutes. Everything before that was okay and worth seeing for the most part and I would have given a positive recommendation without this drastic final decline. One thing I liked quite a bit for example was the idea that she is invisible inside the museum. I am also fond of the idea of Kitty being Anne Frank's diary in the flesh. This rare animation effect when she transforms was pretty cool. Essential, yet magical. I also liked her looking for Anne early on and that she only knows what Anne told her. She keeps exploring and finding out more, for example about Anne's death and what happened to her entire family except her father. The depiction of the book he wrote got me a bit curious too and I might wanna read it at some point. But as they said: First you should read the diary of course. Maybe then you will also understand how awesome it is that Anne's dream of becoming a famous writer really came true.

On a more neutral perspective, this film was almost a bit of a travelling commercial for Amsterdam here and there with the locations mentioned, some named after the girl. A trip to Bergen-Belsen, so back to Germany was also a factor towards the end. Important inclusion and I think it was the right choice. After this trip, the film turned into a mess then. The little romance story with the male refugee, oh well I could have done without it as he was another character supposed to be seen as likable despite having zero respect for law and police in a country that offers him a better life. You could split this film up into two parts, the now and the then, but the action keeps jumping back and forth between the two, so it is hardly a movie with clean structure. Not really an issue though. Even if Kitty (apparently an ice-skating prodigy) looks the same during both eras, despite 70 years or more between them, it was easy to understand where/when we are right now. The romance aspect back in the 1940s I liked more when Anne talks about the boys in her life and eventually grows closer to the "suicidal" one, even if she states it was no love from her side. The moment they are looking at the sky was still kinda sweet and romantic. This was also when the sleazy aspect from Anne's writings came a bit into play. We hear brief talking about male genitalia. It is still kept very kids-friendly as these are the audience the film is mostly going for. Which makes it even more despicable what the movie does in the very end, but I shared my thoughts on that already sufficiently I think. In any case, these segments from the old were also infinitely more memorable because they are linked closely to Anne's words from the book and just more factual, for example how she had to share her room with a dentist. The now is fairly fictitious and good moments there are more of a rarity and when they come, then they are usually linked crucially to the past, like the scene with the video of the crying woman who elaborates on the day that Anne died.

Two more things I would like to mention before the review ends have to do with of romance and destruction. The idea of getting with somebody less desirable who comforts you after the one you really wanted ditches you is questionable. It is more of a depressing thought, no matter if it is reality or not, but people should not want to live this way just to avoid being alone. Love matters. And as for destruction, pay attention to how the East is mentioned on a few occasions here, like really worrying inclusions and dark moments. It is what scared kids back then as they couldn't be sure what is really going on there. The moment early on with the teacher and the disappeared male students that Anne elaborated on right before that was also depressing. Finally, look at how Nazis are depicted in this video, as big faceless creatures, almost monsters with their size that are void of all human traits. They move like robots, they do not talk. I planned on asking Folman about this depiction of evil after the film, but sadly the Q&A was not extended to the audience. It was a mess anyway with the horrible interviewer and the absence of chairs that left Folman baffled too. But that is just a side story. As for the film at hand, I guess you can also call it a cartoon and I liked the style, I have to give it a thumbs-down overall because of the abysmal ending and I suggest you instead the German Anne Frank live action film from a few years ago instead. That one was really good. Or if you decide to watch this one here, then turn it off after around 80 minutes, especially for the sake of your children. And I write that as somebody who never supports discontinuing the watch of a film. But here it became just unbearable.
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8/10
Another Intriguing Work of Art From Ari Folman
szkopoli29 April 2022
In 2008, director Ari Forman gave us Waltz With Bashir, an emotional attempt to settle accounts with his own past, when as a teenage soldier he participated in the most violent event of the war between Palestine and Israel. 13 years later, the director's new project hits the theatres, this time focusing on Anne Frank and the diary she wrote while hiding from the Nazis. With this new film, Ari Forman proves that even the animation aiming at families may be as powerful as other classic representatives of the genre.

The story divides into two layers: the first one focuses on Anne Frank, giving the audience the account of the uncertainty and tragedies her and her family went through, with the deportation to the death camp as its culmination.

The second layer concerns Anne's imaginary friend Kitty. As a result of unexplained phenomenon, Kitty awakens from the diary. Not knowing what happened to Anne, she tries to find her by all cost.

Ari Folman seems to be an admirer of animation. He knows how to use the medium so that his movies work in the emotional sphere. Despite some graphic scenes, Waltz With Bashir had many sequences that supplied the story with more poetical scent. Where Is Anne Frank works to some extent in a similar way. However, we never see violence directly. It's toned down, replaced by the imagery resembling the unforgettable animated sequence from Alan Parker's The Wall. When it comes to the characters themselves, not only do they have eye-candy designes, but also their animation is detailed and fluent.

However, the filmmakers never forget during the whole runtime that presentation is just a medium and it's the characters that engage the audience into the story. Even though there is a whole variety of characters in the movie, each of them is properly developed. I especially liked Kitty, as her determination in the investigation makes the story truly engaging and this is the part, where the true message of the story shines out. As the movie goes on, Folman attempts to coin the message about fighting with racial prejudice both in terms of Jews during World War II and the refugees in modern times. Though initially I had problems with seeing the consistency, the director manages to acheive it at the end of the movie.

All sorts of anti-prejudice media, from books to movies, will always be of great importance.

Where Is Anne Frank may be a good subject for conversation between children and their parents. Both groups may take an important lesson of tolerance out of it. In modern times, this is why such stories are of great value.

Let me finish by quoting the dialogue I remembered from the movie the most.

"Anne: Why do people hate us?

Kitty: Because they always need some scapegoat."
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1/10
Wrong in all aspects
dpospelov-2420216 August 2022
This flick is wrong in all aspects. This movie is manipulating the viewer. I find it wrong to force "the opinion of the moviemakers" on young viewers by using this kind of media. Shame on all involved!
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10/10
tearjerker
melissa-5861611 April 2022
I almost cried as I watched this brilliant movie. What a beautiful way to show what Anne Frank and her diary "Kitty" mean for the young people of today.
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3/10
Can't believe in good intent for doing
ritokessah13 April 2022
It is a problem with historic-point-cinema - hard to do it right. Three ways to do of 1) make parody (hi to genius Charlie Chaplin); 2) documentary (Barefoot Gen for example); 3) near or really fantasy tale (like Handmaid's) I guess this animation worked in the third way mixed with kinda.. alternate history, but in that case here is not enough.. well.. alternate and fantasy? They could add magic spear, unicorns, do Frank as a boy, aliens, heck, anything to show different story or different perspective of alternative.

And since it have not, animation looks raw if not to say more. Well, I might be wrong, but.. something just fishy.
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10/10
Offers A Poignant And Innovative Take On Anne Frank's Story Through Animation And The Adventures Of Her Imaginary Friend, Kitty
rannynm12 March 2024
Where is Anne Frank? Offers a poignant and innovative take on the story of Anne Frank through the lens of animation and the adventures of her imaginary friend, Kitty. I thoroughly enjoyed this film for its unique approach to storytelling and its ability to blend historical narratives with elements of fantasy.

Directed by Ari Folman, the story unfolds as Anne Frank's diary comes to life years after Anne's death. Anne's imaginary friend, Kitty, embarks on a journey to find Anne, spending a lot of time trying to uncover the truth about Anne's fate. Kitty learns about the harrowing experience that Anne and her family experienced during the holocaust, and the heartbreaking reality of their demise.

The film captivates audiences from the outset with its imaginative premise, as her imaginary friend Kitty, embarks on a quest to find Anne years after her death. This narrative device not only provides a fresh perspective on Anne's life but also allows for a deeper exploration of her experiences and legacy. The animation is beautifully crafted, bringing both the historical setting and the fantasy elements of life with vibrant visuals and rich detail. The adventure that Kitty undertakes to uncover the truth about Anne's fate is both suspenseful and emotionally resonant, keeping viewers engaged throughout.

The film's message is that anyone has the right to live in freedom, no matter their race, religion, or culture. Be forewarned this film does contain moderate profanity.

I give Where Is Anne Frank? 5 out of 5 stars and recommend it for ages 8 through 12, plus adults. Be sure to check it out. By Gavin S., KIDS FIRST!
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2/10
Belittles reality
amgblaw12 March 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Seems this preachy animation can't bring itself to show the German occupiers as real people with their real and foul ways - instead they de-humanise them as shadow creatures to divert from the fact that it was ordinary people that slaughtered millions. Deep misunderstanding or intentional misdirection of the history in all aspects from how the Frank family lived to how they were murdered. I'm sure this film was made with good motives - but descends into an patronising insult to truth. As a piece of film, one can credit it with some good animation but that's the only merit. Lost opportunity to make something thought provoking.
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3/10
The end ruined all
pmdssp3 June 2023
This is a good movie with a different approach to a known story to many. The animation is good and the story itself has nice moments and can be very emotional.

Unfortunetely, the last 15 minutes are filled with nowadays propaganda as if Anne Frank is a 20 years old activist, and honestly, if i knew that, i would never watched it since i'm completely over with pretentious and political movies.

I will not spoil anything but the end itself, as a movie, left me empty as it lead me to believe one thing and then reverts completely. I'm fine with creative freedom in storytelling and i usually like unexpected endings, but i didn't liked this and my rating reflects all that.
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2/10
Disappointed
anaglam-932941 April 2024
Warning: Spoilers
I saw everyone talking about this movie, and since I'm a huge fan of Anne, I just thought "Okay, I'll give it a try" and It was a waste of time for me.

I've read Anne Frank's diary, watched lots of documentaries and movies about her, but this movie was so bad, I don't even know how to phrase it!!

To me, the whole "Kitty becomes real" thing is just dumb, I'm sorry, I know it's an animation and all that but it's just dumb in my opinion.

Personally, I wouldn't recommend it to my friends/family, you absolutely have the right to like it but, personally, it's not for me!!

It's just unrealistic and many characters like Peter are just so annoying, the whole romance stuff was so forced too, I saw some people saying the movie made them cry but it was just so boring for me that i had a plain face while watching the movie the whole time!

And the ending was so disappointing!!
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