The Hungarian filmmaker Peter Forgács is one of the most prominent so-called 'found footage' filmmakers. In particular, home movies and amateur films serve as the basis of stories he reveals and composes by using recovered personal and historical events. He is primarily interested in the way in which these films seem to depict only happy moments. But, on closer consideration, they also appear to tell a hidden history, which can be brought back to the surface by the recycling filmmaker in the travelogue The Danube Exodus. He documents the Jewish exodus from Slovakia just before the beginning of World War II. In two boats, a group of 900 Slovak-Austrian Jews tried to reach the Black Sea via the River Danube, in order to get to Palestine from there. Forgács based his film on the amateur films of Captain Nando Andrasovits, the captain of one of the boats. He filmed his passengers while they prayed, slept and even got married. At the end of this journey, it is clear that the boat will not return empty: a reverse exodus takes place, this time repatriating Bessarabian Germans, fleeing to the Third Reich because of the Soviet invasion of Bessarabia.
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