Article 5P2EN Misha and the Wolves review – Holocaust hoax doc plays like thriller

Misha and the Wolves review – Holocaust hoax doc plays like thriller

by
Cath Clarke
from on (#5P2EN)

This film about Misha Defonseca, author of a memoir' about escaping the Nazis and sheltering with wolves as a child, is propulsively watchable

Sometimes a story is so astonishing it's unbelievable." So said a Massachusetts radio presenter in the 90s, introducing Misha Defonseca, a local Jewish woman originally from Belgium. As a child in the war, Defonseca walked hundreds of miles across Nazi-occupied Germany to find her parents. She was one of Belgium's hidden children", taken in by a Catholic family, her identity erased. In her internationally bestselling memoir she described how, cold and hungry, she was sheltered by a pack of wolves. Disney wanted to turn it into a film. Oprah Winfrey's book club was interested.

The thing is: Defonseca was a fake. Never mind a pack of wolves, her whole memoir was a pack of lies; a hoax Holocaust narrative. This documentary assembles the story like a thriller, interviewing the key players, keeping the audience guessing about certain important details until the end. It's propulsively watchable if a tad light on reflection. And you may feel hoodwinked by one late reveal.

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