The Diary of Anne Frank

    The Diary of Anne Frank
    1959

    Synopsis

    The true, harrowing story of a young Jewish girl who, with her family and their friends, is forced into hiding in an attic in Nazi-occupied Amsterdam.

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    Cast

    • Millie PerkinsAnne Frank
    • Joseph SchildkrautOtto Frank
    • Shelley WintersPetronella Van Daan
    • Richard BeymerPeter Van Daan
    • Gusti HuberEdith Frank
    • Lou JacobiHans Van Daan
    • Diane BakerMargot Frank
    • Douglas SpencerKraler
    • Dodie HeathMiep Gies
    • Ed WynnAlbert Dussell

    Recommendations

    • 88

      USA Today

      An intimate three-hour epic adapted less from Frank's diary than the Broadway version. [06 Feb 2004, p.6E]
    • 80

      The New York Times

      Mr. Stevens has done a superb job of putting upon the screen the basic drama and shivering authenticity of the Frances Goodrich-Albert Hackett play, which in turn caught the magnitude of drama in the real-life diary of a Jewish girl.
    • 80

      TV Guide Magazine

      A vivid and carefully produced work of poignancy and loss.
    • 75

      Washington Post

      Time has been good to the brave blend of stark realism and Hollywood production values of this drama, inspired by the writings of the young girl who continued to believe in the fundamental decency of mankind even as her family hid from the Nazis in an Amsterdam attic. [07 Nov 2004, p.N03]
    • 70

      Variety

      A film of often extraordinary quality. It manages, within the framework of a tense and tragic situation, to convey the beauty of a young and inquiring spirit that soars beyond the cramped confinement of the Frank family's hideout in Nazi-occupied Amsterdam.
    • 60

      Empire

      There are some poignant moments, but Steven's decision to shoot a claustrophobic movie in CinemaScope and the stage-bound feel of the whole enterprise never bring the action to life.
    • 50

      Chicago Reader

      Something in me admires George Stevens's perversity in shooting this film about entrapment and compression in 'Scope, but that's the only interesting quirk in this otherwise inert work, which represents Stevens at the height of his pretentiousness and the depths of his accomplishment (1959).
    • 50

      Chicago Tribune

      Adapted from the Goodrich-Hackett play, it just misses the spiritual and emotional majesty it reaches for.

    Loved by

    • Creepy Chan