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| Gray Matter | 
| Director: Joe Berlinger Studio: New Video Group Category: DVD
List Price: $26.95 Buy New: $8.10 You Save: $18.85 (70%)
New (31) from $8.10
Avg. Customer Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 40841
Format: Black & White, Closed-captioned, Color, Dvd-video, Ntsc Languages: English (Original Language), German (Original Language) Rating: NR (Not Rated) Running Time: 59 minutes Number Of Items: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
ISBN: 0767080742 UPC: 767685971338 EAN: 9780767080743 ASIN: B0007WFUR4
Theatrical Release Date: 2004 Release Date: June 28, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Description From highly acclaimed filmmaker Joe Berlinger (Brother's Keeper, Paradise Lost 1 & 2, Metallica: Some Kind of Monster)--one of the leading voices in American independent non-fiction cinema-comes Gray Matter, a riveting true-life mystery and perhaps the most baffling conspiracy story ever told about World War II. In the spring of 2002, Berlinger traveled to Vienna to witness the burial of the preserved brains from over 700 children who were experimented upon in a Nazi "euthanasia" clinic. Gray Matter chronicles the director's personal journey as he searches for forensic psychiatrist Dr. Heinrich Gross (notoriously nicknamed "the Austrian Dr. Mengele"), who allegedly participated in these mad-scientist trials for decades after the Holocaust and the end of the war. Along his path towards the unknown, Berlinger meets clinic survivors and other remarkable voices, each of whom has new light to shed upon this shadowy legacy and the nation that now grapples with its own denial. Is Dr. Gross alive? Is he in hiding? Should his advanced age and scientific aspirations be measured today against the accountability of his misdeeds? Raising provocative yet respectful questions of guilt, redemption and the ethics of mankind, Berlinger sorts out the twists in one of history's lesser-known, unsolved puzzles.
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| Customer Reviews:
A stark tale of the damaged human psyche April 21, 2006 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
I can think of no better example than "Gray Matter" to illustrate mankind's unwillingness to learn from (or even lend an ear to) its mistakes and that at heart we are merely beasts, malicious and cold to the core. This documentary exploring an Austrian doctor tied in with and most likely the driving force behind the killing of and experimentation on hundreds of children during the Nazi era and beyond contains many horrific moments. Just the idea alone that there exists enough literature and evidence, not to mention firsthand witness accounts, to prove Dr. Heinrich Gross' guilt many times over, yet Gross has never been convicted on any counts causes double-takes, jaws to drop and hairs to stand on end. In fact, the last time Gross was brought to stand on trial, in 2003, the case was dismissed; he was determined not fit to stand trial because he was hard of hearing and the judge had positioned him at a conspicuously safe distance from the bench. The survivors' accounts of what went on in the mental hospital run by Gross are hard to bear, especially that of a former patient who delivers his horror story in a deadpan manner. An interesting point in the film -- one that underlines the director's attempt to stay objective -- is an interview with Gross' lawyer, who charges that his client is innocent of any crimes because he hasn't ever been convicted, and seems sincere. What the film doesn't say but implies is that there is something inherently wrong with the nation of Austria. Whereas Germany has genuinely apologized for the crimes of its former dictator and attempted to right some wrongs, Austria, by the fact that it never relinquished the pension it paid Gross while he was alive, and in fact continues to defend his work (which Gross continued on the Nazi-era murdered children's brains into the 1990s, mind you) and remained tight-lipped as to his whereabouts until he died this past December, as if he was some kind of mob boss, seems to be built of a damaged psyche. Maybe something in the soil that got in the water? Any more direct conclusions would only be playing the same blame and slay game.
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