Ellis (2015) Poster

(2015)

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8/10
Poignant, provocative
alpineinc9 January 2016
Confused by the earlier review here, but for those of us on US shores that are intimate with the profound import of Ellis Island to this country, it's a touching tribute to those who were hoping for a better life but were either quarantined or turned away, and reflects on the continuing struggles of immigrants today as well. The enigmatic French artist JR evokes an unsettling portrait of the ghosts of the Ellis Island Hospital complex, abandoned for over 60 years and rarely granted public access, and Robert DeNiro, in a refreshing contemporary serious turn, deftly narrates and embodies the travails of one particular immigrant as we travel through the crumbling hallways and cracked windows of the past. A perfect subject and location for a short film, and a heartfelt homage to not only the US but the universal immigration experience. It's only 15 minutes, and it's free. Watch it.
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9/10
Visiting Ellis Island
alvin2011 March 2016
For a short time in the late 1970s the government allowed the public to tour parts of the decaying buildings on Ellis Island. This was before some parts were spruced up for visitors as they are today. I was one of the few fortunate to be able to take the tour, and it gave a very profound look into the sadness and terror the island represented to so many. This film very ably conveys the feelings they must have experienced.

I am a student of New York history, especially that related to its Port and the significance of all in it. I recommend this short film because it certainly gives a very insightful look at Ellis Island.
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Great Looking and Well Made
Michael_Elliott10 September 2016
Ellis (2015)

*** 1/2 (out of 4)

Robert DeNiro narrates and is featured in this short film, which is a tribute to Ellis Island. Basically we see DeNiro walking around and narrating his story of an immigrant and what happened to him on the island.

At just fifteen-minutes this is a pretty good short that works on many levels. Technically the film is extremely impressive and especially the cinematography by Andre Chemetoff. The camera-work is really some of the best that I can remember from any recent movie because it pulls you into the story but it also manages to make you float into the past where the narration is talking about.

DeNiro is also in fine form here as the narrator. Eric Roth's screenplay is direct with its words and there's no question that the film works as a tribute as well as having something to say about immigration. DeNiro manages to turn in a tender performance as he tells the story of one man, his dreams and his outcome.
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4/10
References would have been nice
druid-376705 March 2016
Warning: Spoilers
I watched this for two reasons: I love history, and Ellis Island has plenty of it, and DeNiro who is arguably one of the greatest actors of all time. I found it lacking. Through the short film I found myself absorbed, thinking this was one of my favorite actors' personal story. Alas, that was not the case and there was no mention at all as to the identity of the young boy who was being characterized or the young girl who died. The film was the worse for that omission of these pertinent details. By the end it seemed more like a plea for donations to a cause to keep Ellis Island as a national monument. It was heartfelt but I felt betrayed at the end.
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4/10
Good intentions, weak execution
Horst_In_Translation31 December 2015
Warning: Spoilers
"Ellis" is a 2015 15-minute live-action short film directed by JR, no idea who that is, and written by Eric Roth, academy Award winner for "Forrest Gump". We see some solid shots, occasionally artistic while listening to Robert De Niro, who tells us the story of an immigrant that arrived at Ellis Island. I must say immigration and refugees were among the most-discussed topics in 2015, at least here in Germany, so there is an interesting connection to this short film. Still, I must say I am missing some substance here. It never felt really relevant to me and interesting to anybody who isn't a refugee themselves or has a connection to the Island that is the center of this little movie. Sadly, this is on-par with the forgettable movies De Niro has appeared in for a while. Sucks to see. I like him. But I cannot recommend "Ellis". Thumbs down.
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This was subject to serious allegations of plagerism
VoyagerMN19864 December 2018
If you have read "L'Uomo in Frac" you are going to squirm a bit at what looks a lot like plagiarism. I am no expert on the law but it seems a bit nasty to rip off another artist as the press has noted may have occurred with this film.

On the film itself, I have to agree with the several other reviewers here who find it problematic. It is entirely fictionalized and gives a poor representation of process at Ellis Island when it was operating. EG The hospital area was for a tiny, very small fraction of a percentage of immigrants who had serious diseases, mostly communicable disease at a time before antibiotics or much in terms of vaccines etc. The disease people were held or sent back for were permanent lifetime disabilities, and permanent profound lifetime threats to public health including pandemic type disease.

A far as the rest of the rumination of Di Niro during the 15 minute film, Eliis island was not comparable to todays immigration issues. Not one iota. Yes the *immigrants* themselves were not so different, but the US was very different as was the world economy. They did not change but we, the US changed. The US needed low skilled and unskilled labor, where demand was increasing at profound rates -- while today demand for unskilled and low skilled labor keeps dropping in the US. The amount of taxpayer funded social benefits re also profoundly higher today

the entire point of Ellis island and two or three smaller centers like it was focusing all immigration in a handful of entry points. This is very different than having thousands of miles of open border.

Also the US had a very strong assimilationist culture which was part of the well understood agreement with incoming immigrants. The peer reviewed work on immigrants shows less and less have a feeling of loyalty toward the US, less and less want to think of themselves as Americans. Ellis Immigrants had to renounce their loyalty to their former country. Heck today a major of Latin American immigrants maintain dual citizenship, vote in both countries (thereby diluting and disenfranchising native born voters).

Lastly the imagery of Ellis is severely cherry picked. Ellis Island had millions and million sin restoration work. This film picked one or two out of the many buildings that were not restored, which is why the film would look completely unrepresentative to the millions of tourists who have visited Ellis Island since it was mostly restored
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