The Boy in the Striped Pajamas Review
By Paul Brenner
Bruno shares a family dinner with his loving parents (Vera Farmiga and David Thewlis) and his older sister Gretel (Amber Beattie). With their sparkling British Masterpiece Theatre accents, the family appears as well-scrubbed paragons of British banality. (Even Richard Johnson, that great bastion of British nobility from the epics of the 1960s, is exhumed to appear as the family's Grandpa.) So it comes as a shock when Thewlis dons a German commandant's uniform for a going-away party and Herman quietly reveals that the Dad has been reassigned, taking the family with him. As Dad remarks, "Home is where the family is." In this case, however, home is Auschwitz and Dad is the new camp commandant, who will be supervising the mass exterminations.
The family arrives at its new home, an imposing, Godless mansion, and dark smoke from the Auschwitz furnaces billows in the background. Herman frames this detail matter-of-factly, as one more image in the composition, trying to place the point-of-view somewhat from Bruno's perspective, which, as the film progresses, becomes trickier and trickier to maintain.
That's especially so when Bruno, being taught blatant hate from a rabid, though coolly controlled, anti-Semitic tutor, is told, "I think, Bruno, if you ever found a nice Jew, you would be the greatest explorer in the world." At that point, Bruno has already found his "nice Jew," another eight-year-old boy, Shmuel (Jack Scanlon), a broken, bedraggled inmate of the concentration camp, whom Bruno sneaks out to see and pass the time with on the opposite side of barbed wire of the camp. The idea of a concentration camp is beyond Bruno's comprehension, thinking the place to be a farm where the farmers wear pajamas, and asking Shmuel if the tattooed number on his wrist is part of a game along with, "What do you burn in those chimneys?"
Herman shoots these scenes delicately, but it also sends the film into a real storybook mode, which makes the film disturbing in ways not intended. Bruno apparently has no problem meeting up with Shmuel every day by the barbed wire, and there is never a patrolling soldier in evidence, making Auschwitz look less like Auschwitz and more like a minimum-security honor's prison farm in South Carolina. And when the reality of Auschwitz takes hold of Bruno's family, all of Herman's delicate setup is abandoned. Gretel becomes an impassioned Hitler youth, Mom deteriorates into a shallow shell of her previously vibrant self, and Dad, as played by Thewlis, turns into a buffoonish caricature -- contemptuously blowing cigarette smoke, slamming his fist on a table demanding more wine, and adopted a popeyed, addled expression like a bad guy Nazi from an old Sgt. Fury comic book.
But Herman regains his footing for the harrowing final scene of the film, when Bruno digs under the fence to help Shmuel find his father. All the pretenses of the family are shattered as the charnel house smoke finally consumes Mom, Dad, Gretel, and Bruno, and the reality of who these ordinary people really are becomes a devastating experience for both the characters and the audience.
Aka The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas.
So that's where my spare went.

Facts and Figures
Year: 2008
Run time: 94 mins
In Theaters: Friday 28th November 2008
Box Office USA: $9.0M
Box Office Worldwide: $20.4M
Budget: $12.5M
Distributed by: Miramax
Production compaines: Miramax Films, BBC Films, Heyday Films
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 3.5 / 5
Rotten Tomatoes: 63%
Fresh: 85 Rotten: 50
IMDB: 7.8 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: Mark Herman
Producer: David Heyman, Mark Herman, Rosie Alison
Screenwriter: Mark Herman
Starring: David Thewlis as Father, Asa Butterfield as Bruno, Zac Mattoon O'Brien as Leon, Domonkos Németh as Martin, Henry Kingsmill as Karl, Vera Farmiga as Mother, Jack Scanlon as Shmuel, Cara Horgan as Maria, Amber Beattie as Gretel, Zsuzsa Holl as Berlin Cook, László Áron as Lars, Richard Johnson as Grandpa, Sheila Hancock as Grandma, Charlie Baker as Palm Court Singer, Iván Verebély as Meinberg, Béla Fesztbaum as Schultz, Rupert Friend as Lieutenant Kurt Kotler
Also starring: David Hayman, Jim Norton, David Heyman, Mark Herman