I wrote my senior thesis at the Jackson School many years ago on Collectivization, which I have long considered a criminally under-appreciated story in the West, the lone exception being the recent Red Famine by Anne Applebaum, so I was excited to see a review of the film Mr. Jones in today's New York Times.
This work by Polish director Agnieszka Holland, who years ago directed the exceptional WWII/Holocaust drama Europa Europa, covers the story of Welsh Journalist, and former advisor to Lloyd George, Gareth Jones and his trip to the Soviet Union in the early 1930's. I still find it appalling that so little is known about an event in which somewhere between 3 and 10 million people were murdered, so maybe I am biased, but I found it a quite interesting portrayal, if sometimes a bit surreal. Admittedly I was quite the fanboy when George Orwell made a cameo. Well, that and the fact that Walter Duranty is essentially the main villain. Did I mention that I was the president of the local Anti-Walter Duranty Society? Regardless, it is an important story that is competently portrayed in a new an interesting way, and deserving of your attention in an era when we are often left with watching the latest superhero movie for the 4th time.
Friday, June 19, 2020
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