![]() ![]() I would recommend this to anyone from the age 12 and up. This is a heart wrenching story that is sure to make the reader/viewer cry. ![]() The book has more details, along with things that are not in the film. If anyone were to read or watch this, I would prefer the book. In the movie, the scene is not as violent and neither get a whipping, instead, “papa” has to tell the officer his name, which causes fear, causing him to have Max leave. Both “papa” and the Jew are whipped by a Nazi officer. ![]() In the book and movie, a Jew is being marched through town, and he gives him a piece of bread. One last difference is when Liesel’s “papa” gets into a incident with a Nazi officer. In the book, Ilsa told her they are no longer doing washing, so Liesel threw a book at Ilsa, but in the movie it was quite calm. Her husband (the mayor) finds out, and no longer allows Liesel to do their laundry any longer. It truly is good for all ages because the underlying themes and precise wording and foreshadowing can keep any reader on edge. In the movie, Ilsa lets Liesel read books in her library while doing her laundry. It requires a certain level of maturity to enjoy, and I would only recommend it to an 11 year old with well above average reading skills. There is a character named Ilsa Hermann that Liesel meets halfway through the book and movie. The Book Thief, a film situated on a true story directed by Brian Percival and was discharged to the public, January the 9th 2014. Also, in the book, the Hubermanns have fostered many kids before Liesel. Whilst the hardship and apprehension of World War II, this heartwarming and melodramatic film has an influential directive anticipated to the audience, demonstrating the assorted themes. In the movie, they do not have kids, and never have had kids, but in the book, they have a son who fights in the army for the Germans. The German couple that Liesel is living with is named the Hubermanns. In the book though, Max dreams to be a fighter, but in the movie, they cut his whole dream out. Adapted from the 2005 best-selling novel of the same name by Markus Zusak (a book that remained on The New York times best-seller list for almost seven years), THE BOOK THIEF is the story of Liesel, a young German girl shipped off to live with. In both the book and the movie, the German couple hides a Jew named Max Vandenburg in their basement, which causes tension and worry. To describe the film in a word, it’s quite simply, MAGNIFICENT. Throughout this book/movie, there are many differences. In the film/book The Book Thief, Liesel Meminger gets taken from her mother and is adopted by a German couple. There are two kinds of people, the people who will only see the movie, and those who refuse to watch the movie until they read the book. ![]()
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