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One summer’s night in 1945, 300 children are in transit from Prague to the Lake District, a remote and picturesque corner of the English countryside. They are child survivors of the Nazi Holocaust that has all but wiped out Europe’s Jews – and for these particular children, their entire families too. They are some of the 1000 children the British government has granted refuge to, giving them a place where they can rehabilitate and grow strong after the devastation of the war. They carry only the clothes they wear and a few meagre possessions, along with the physical and psychological scars of all they have suffered. They do not know what awaits them in Britain and naturally they are fearful: they don’t speak English, and having spent many years living in death camps, have missed out on a proper education. But the children are also excited, for the war is over, and there is always hope that the future will be kinder to them than the past. (Spirit Entertainment)

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Malarkey 

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English Most of the stories from World War II end at its conclusion. But what happened afterwards? This story tries to tell about it and it is a very interesting tale. A group of rescued Jewish children is taken somewhere in the middle of the English countryside, where they will try to create better conditions for their lives. This brings various thoughts and questions that run through the minds of each of them. The story is no less interesting and I must say that even at the end of the film, it is no less emotional. Beautiful, intimate, decent, typical of English cinematography. ()

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