¶ … Shop on the Main Street
Continental European film producers were slow to focus on political and social injustices as the dominant themes after World War II. Heroism in America and Soviet World War II movies was not a significant theme, primarily because, with the exclusion of Switzerland and Sweden, other countries' dwellers either were part of the Nazi regime or collaborated with the rule. Therefore, the filmmakers, when making films, focused on the societies' immersion in the totalitarian ruling systems. Similar to other countries of Europe, excluding Switzerland and Sweden, all other countries in central Europe lived under Authoritarian and totalitarian regimes in the period between the Second World War. However, after the war, the continent split, and this influenced how the filmmakers made films. Germans, Slovaks, Czechs and Hungary embraced the Nazi regime, whereas Austria and three quarters of Germany embraced democracy. This is partly a contributing factor as to why Jan and Elmar settled on producing a film in this line of diversion to show how the Nazi regime operated (Votruba, 2011).
The Shop on Main Street is a film set in a Slovak town when Nazi power was dominating in German and Europe. Filming took place in Sabinov, eastern Slovakia. The setting depicted almost all central European towns during the World War II. It is in 1942; Hitler's army conquered almost the entire Europe through brutal force. Slovakia is just among the German-controlled countries where Nazi laws are in full force. Some of the results of the Nazi laws are the persecution and extermination of Jews. The movie blends multi-dimensional characters, who aid in enhancing richly nuanced performances, and drama. Notably, the movie does not employ the traditional models of narratives set in time of war, such as heroism and self-sacrifice (Votruba, 2011), and opts to focus on the morally undermined characters and the strategies they employ decision wise to survive, mostly in times of fascist laws at the expense of others. Probably, this is why the movie won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Film. In the movie, The Shop on Main Street, the objective was to deal with the brutal Nazi laws by addressing the moral dilemmas, which result owing to the implementation of the laws.
The small Slovakian town appears to have not felt the effects from the World War II, such as invasion, occupation of a large proportion by German fascism. Characters in the movie attempt to live in a manner, which they could achieve a normal life characterized by different levels of compromise, intentional ignorance, and complicity. During Sundays, the town dwellers rest, go to church services, and stroll around the main square. During the strolling, it is apparent that some of the strollers are in similar black uniforms, worn by the Nazi, but these particular ones have different signs. Such people represent those that have openly accepted the Nazi laws, an in turn, have received privileges of power and other privileges over the other town dwellers, such as the Jews and Slovakians. Similarly, during the World War II, the Czechs showed resistance to the Nazi regime; however, they settled for brutal punishments. The Slovakians, on the other hand, the embraced the Nazi regime, and, hence, saved themselves from the subsequent effects of the war. The Shop on Main Street explains why the small town in Slovakia, appeared isolated from the rest, but people within it lived differently. The Slovakia leaders embraced the Nazi regime, which left the other dwellers with no choice, except in the variation of the degree of acceptance of the Nazi rule (Banovac, 2005).
The movieThe Shop on Main Street depicts Tono as a lazy man, who is a carpenter by profession, but he feels content when he drinks, which he uses as a shield from his nagging wife. He appears to prefer the drinking when compared to working. Nonetheless, he is a man who rather preferred to resist the Nazi rules. The arising complication in his life, as stated, is his wife. This is because she appears to influence his husband. This is in terms of the conflict existing between them; Tono is resisting the Nazi rule, whereas his wife (Hana Slivkova) is collaborating with the Nazi rule. This is a typical moral dilemma. Two people living in a house as husband and wife, but their ideologies differ. In many cases, people who live together, often sail in the same or share the similar ideologies. This presents a dilemma, which Tono opts to solve by drinking,...
She also learns, too late, that the jewels and the life she coveted so long ago was a sham. Hence, the symbolic nature of the necklace itself -- although it appears to have great value, it is in fact only real in appearance, not in reality and the heroine is incapable of assessing the false necklace's true worth. The tale of "The Necklace" conveys the moral that what is real,
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