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In the 1930s, Wladyslaw Szpilman (Adrien Brody) who born to a wealthy Jewish family was known as the most accomplished piano player in Poland. The Szpilmans have a large and comfortable flat in Warsaw which Wladyslaw shares with his family. While Wladyslaw and his family are aware of the looming presence of German forces and Hitler's designs on Poland, they are convinced that the Nazis are a menace which will pass and that England and France will step forward to aid Poland in the event of a real crisis.
In September 1939, a German bomb rips through a radio station while Wladyslaw plays live on the air and shattered his naivete. As the German grip tightens upon Poland, Wladyslaw and his family are selected for deportation to a Nazi concentration camp. Refusing to face a certain death, Wladyslaw at last deciding to escape and goes into hiding in a comfortable apartment provided by a friend. However, when his benefactor goes missing, Wladyslaw is left to fend for himself and he spends the next several years dashing from one abandoned home to another, desperate to avoid capture by German occupation troops.
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WLADYSLAW SZPILMAN |
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WILM HOSENFELD |
Newly freed Poles walk past an improvised Russian prisoner of war camp and Hosenfeld is among the prisoners. The Poles hurl insults at the Germans through the fence but when Hosenfeld hears that one of the Poles is a musician, he goes to the fence and tells him that he has helped Wladyslaw and asks him to ask Wladyslaw to return the favor, before a Russian soldier throws him back down on the ground. The Polish musician visits Wladyslaw and takes him to the site but they have vanished. Wladyslaw is unable to help Hosenfeld, but he returns to play piano for the radio station.
At the ending of the film, it tells Hosenfeld died in a Soviet Prisoner-of-War Camp in 1952 and Wladyslaw lived to be an old man, dying in Warsaw at the age of eighty-eight.
Movie Trailer:
Chopin Ballade No. 1 in G minor, Op 23
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