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An audience favorite at more than 50 film festivals around the world, and the centerpiece of dozens of panels and
conferences at theaters, universities, and museums from Warsaw to Washington, DC, IMAGINARY WITNESS tells a provocative
and mostly unknown story of the 60-year relationship between Hollywood and the atrocities of Nazi Germany.
With scenes from over forty films, rare newsreels, and interviews with leading scholars, filmmakers, and witnesses to
the events portrayed, IMAGINARY WITNESS takes the viewer on a 60-year journey from the American ambivalence and denial
during the heyday of Nazism, through the silence of the post-war years, and into the end of the 20th century. The film
explores not only the question of how an industry that sells fantasy has dealt with one of the most horrifying episodes
in modern world history, but also how the movies themselves reflect America's ever-evolving relationship to the events
of that era.
At the core of the film is an ethical and moral debate about portrayal. Is it even possible to imagine on screen the
unimaginable? Should the movie industry even undertake such an endeavor? Ultimately, the film asks hard questions: about
the uneasy relationship between American popular culture and the Holocaust, about the responsibility of filmmakers in
their portrayal of history, and about the power of film to affect the way we look at ourselves.
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