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FOR PARENTS
Deleted scenes (with optional commentary by writer/director Mark Herman and author John Boyne); Friendship Beyond the Fence featurette; Feature commentary by writer/director Mark Herman and author John Boyne
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- The Boy in the Striped Pajamas
1. Opening Credits [4:02]
2. A New Beginning [6:29]
3. Moving Day [5:32]
4. Garden Gate [4:44]
5. Falling of the Swing [8:02]
6. Bruno Discovers Camp [6:21]
7. The Cellar [6:50]
8. A Nice Jew [5:55]
9. Where There's Smoke [8:34]
10. Bruno's Guilt [7:42]
11. The Funeral [5:04]
12. A Game of Checkers [2:19]
13. Bruno's Plan [2:11]
14. A Tragic Sequence [6:44]
15. End Credits [4:09]
Vera Farmiga, David Thewlis, and Asa Butterfield star in Little Voice writer/director Mark Herman's adaptation of John Boyne's novel concerning the forbidden friendship that between an eight-year-old German boy and a Jewish concentration camp prisoner in World War II-era Germany. The innocent son of a high-ranking Nazi commandant, Bruno has been largely shielded from the harsh realities of the war. When Bruno discovers that his father has been promoted and that their family will be moving from Berlin into the countryside, he doesn't take the news well. Increasingly bored in his sprawling yet dreary country abode and forbidden by his mother from exploring the backyard, young Bruno searches for something to do while his older sister plays with dolls and vies for the attention of handsome Lieutenant Kotler (Rupert Friend). One day, bored and gazing out his bedroom window, Bruno spies what first appears to be a nearby farm; his parents refuse to discuss it, and all of the inhabitants there are curiously clad in striped pajamas. But while Bruno's mother naďvely believes the "farm" to be an internment camp, her husband has sworn under oath never to reveal that it is in fact an extermination camp specifically designed to help the Nazis achieve their horrific "Final Solution." Eventually defying his mother's rules and venturing out beyond the backyard, Bruno arrives at a barbed wire fence to find a young boy just his age emptying rubble from a wheel barrel. Like Pavel, the kitchen worker who cooks all of Bruno's meals, the young boy is wearing striped pajamas. His name is Shmuel (Jack Scanlon), and before long the two young boys become fast friends. But the closer these two boys grow, the more Bruno becomes awakened to the horrors unfolding all around them. His mother is catching on quickly as well, a fact that causes great tension in her marriage to Bruno's father. Later, after Bruno swipes a piece of cake for Shmuel, Lt. Kotler accuses the Jewish boy of stealing and delivers a swift punishment. When Bruno's father announces that the young boy and his mother will be going to live with their aunt in Heidelberg, Bruno grabs a shovel and makes his way to the camp, setting into motion a tragic and devastating sequence of events. Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Characters drink hard liquor, champagne, and wine and smoke cigarettes and cigars (accurate for the time period).
One non-sexual use of "f---ing" extensive use of "Jew" as an epithet.
Guards brandish guns; prisoners are threatened with guns, clubs, and dogs. A beating is administered off screen. Discussion of a supporting character dying during an English bombing raid. The mechanisms of mass extermination are seen in act... More
Guards brandish guns; prisoners are threatened with guns, clubs, and dogs. A beating is administered off screen. Discussion of a supporting character dying during an English bombing raid. The mechanisms of mass extermination are seen in action, including a sensitively shot yet still devastating sequence in which a room crammed with concentration-camp prisoners is gassed. Close
A Mercedes logo is visible on the hood of a car.
Affection between a long-married couple; non-sexual, waist-up male nudity as concentration camp prisoners strip for a "shower."
About TheBoy in the Striped Pajamas
Parents need to know that this intense World War II-set drama follows a young boy whose father, a German officer, has moved the entire family close to his new assignment -- running a death camp dedicated to the mass extermination and murder of Jewish prisoners. The boy befriends a prisoner on the other side of the wire even as his teachers and parents explain to him about how "the Jew" is the enemy. Given the subject matter, the film -- which culminates in a room full of people being killed with poison gas -- could be difficult to watch for viewers of any age. There's also some drinking and smoking and concentration camp violence.
Families can talk about what teens know about the Holocaust. What upset them in the movie? Why? Ask your kids whether they think people can be good and evil at the same time. Then you can go into the discussion of how the Holocaust was kept secret. Was it actually hidden, or did people know and simply look the other way? Families can also discuss what keeps drawing filmmakers and audiences to this subject material.