Peter Cieslinski

Peter Cieslinski

  • Born: 1953-0-0
  • Height: 5' 10¾" (1.8 m)
  • Extended Reading
    • Consuelo 2022-04-01 08:01:02

      Re: Crime and Punishment in the Auschwitz Trial

      Author: Xu Ben
      From: "Eastern History Review"

      On October 30, 1943, the "Moscow Declaration" announced that the Allies would extradite Germans who committed war crimes to the country where they committed the crime after the war, and the court hearing. The Auschwitz concentration camp is located in...

    • Jerrod 2022-04-01 09:01:19

      what is silence

      This film completely reflects on society from another angle, a very good entry point and realistic theme. What makes us think more deeply is why our country has no reflection, but only silence, silence about all the sufferings of the past, selective forgetting and amnesia. A nation with memories...

    • Kirsten 2022-04-07 09:01:06

      Auschwitz is the most exciting (for both the characters and the audience) at the beginning of the show, and the male protagonist's obsession with chasing Mendler's line is not bad. But the subject matter is too heavy, the screenwriter wants to cover everything as much as possible, and there are some dramatic turns in the protagonist, but the film loses its strength. Compared with spotlight, the latter's way of going all the way to the dark feels much more frightening.

    • Earl 2022-04-06 09:01:07

      Late judgment, but someone turned those silences into shouts. It is a pity that Auschwitz's biggest executioner, the doctor, was not brought to justice. It is a pity that 17 of the 19 people in the largest trial refused to admit the crime. It is a pity that the male protagonist even questioned his own father. But without such a wash, how can it be possible to remain innocent? The rigor and courage of the Germans are indeed worthy of admiration. After all, what really exists in history will not be erased even if you pretend to lose your memory.

    Labyrinth of Lies quotes

    • Johann Radmann: ...the only response to Auschwitz is to do the right thing yourself.

    • Generalstaatsanwalt Fritz Bauer: If you think this is all about who's guilty, partly guilty or innocent, then you've learned nothing, nothing at all.