
March 10, 1976 · 50 years old

A Jewish-Hungarian concentration camp prisoner sets out to give a child he mistook for his son a proper burial.

A low-key satire that takes a droll approach to the serious subject of illegal immigration.

Kaleb, a beloved German Shepherd, is separated from his Jewish family when the Nuremberg Laws are enacted in WWII Berlin. He is adopted by an SS Officer who trains him to attack and round up Jews at a work camp.

Hungarian obstetrician Bálint Grassai left his native village in Maramures, Romania many years ago to attend medical school in Budapest. He also left behind a son he never met, the result of a short affair with a local woman. At E...