South America, 1960. A lonely and grumpy Holocaust survivor convinces himself that his new neighbor is none other than Adolf Hitler. Not being taken seriously, he starts an independent investigation to prove his claim, but when the evidence still appears to be inconclusive, Polsky is forced to engage in a relationship with the enemy in order to obtain irrefutable proof.
This movie contains 1 potentially triggering events.
Two men briefly discuss whether a woman is sexy, and they mention particular parts of her body, but not in a nasty way - they say "behind" and "bosoms". At one point, we see her dress down to her nightgown before going to bed, and one of the men positions himself so he can watch without being discovered.
The movie is centered around Nazism and the Holocaust, although no scenes take place during the WW2 years. The main character survived the camps and lost his entire family. The only direct antisemitism we witness in the movie is one sentence: "You may be a Jew, but you're [something positive]".
We see an old man showering twice. One of the times, he slips, falls and hits his head hard on the edge of the tub, but he gets back up and seems fine immediately afterwards.
We see a cheerful family, including children, in a single scene in the beginning, and then the movie jumps to 25 years later, where the rest of the movie takes place. We find out that all but one of the family members we saw in the first scene died in the Holocaust. We don't see the children die or suffer, and we're not told exactly how they died. The movie's main character was the father of at least one of the children, a girl seemingly in her early teens.
Well, someone leaves their new dog with someone else when they move away, but the dog doesn't seem sad, since it's had barely any time to bond with the first owner, and it's fond of the new owner.
We see a group of cheerful people in a single scene in the beginning, and then the movie jumps to 25 years later, where the rest of the movie takes place. We find out that all but one of the people we saw in the first scene died in the Holocaust. The surviving person is the main protagonist, who is still grieving the others. We don't see any of them die or suffer, and we're not told exactly how they died.
We see a cheerful family in a single scene in the beginning, and then the movie jumps to 25 years later, where the rest of the movie takes place. We find out that all but one of the family members we saw in the first scene died in the Holocaust. The surviving person is the main protagonist, who is still grieving his family. We don't see any of them die or suffer, and we're not told exactly how they died.
We see a cheerful family, including the main character's somewhat elderly parents, in a single scene in the beginning, and then the movie jumps to 25 years later, where the rest of the movie takes place. We find out that all but one of the family members we saw in the first scene died in the Holocaust. We don't see the parents die or suffer, and we're not told exactly how they died.
I guess, but it's extremely mild. A woman undresses a little bit while someone she knows who's sexually/romantically interested in her secretly watches. No nudity in the scene; she only gets down to her nightgown.