By clicking "Accept", you agree to cookies being stored on your device to improve site navigation, analyze site usage and assist us in our marketing efforts. See our Legal Notice for more information.
40 years ago, on April 30, 1985, 40 years after Hitler's suicide on April 30, 1945, the first privileged few had the unprecedented experience of discovering the film that has become eternal: Shoah. This UFO (unidentified cinematic object) was initially screened in three Parisian cinemas, as only three 35 mm prints were available: Le Monte Carlo at 52 avenue des Champs-Élysées, and two of Frédéric Mitterrand's cinemas: the Olympic Maryline at 10 rue Boyer-Barret in the 14th arrondissement and the Olympic Luxembourg at 67 rue Monsieur-le-Prince in the 6th arrondissement.
The Berlinale screening of Shoah in February marks the 80th anniversary of the end of the Second World War and the beginning of the liberation of the camps. To accompany the Berlinale screening, Polish artist Aleksander Walijewski created this new poster.
The Association Claude et Felix Lanzmann wishes you a Happy New Year 2025
In an increasingly difficult global context, the ACFL, Association Claude et Felix Lanzmann, wishes you all the best for 2025, starting with the celebration of the centenary of Claude Lanzmann's birth, which will be an opportunity to rediscover his work.
Reissue of Shoah, booklet for the film by Claude Lanzmann
In a preview of Claude Lanzmann's centenary celebrations, Fayard is reissuing Shoah in the Œuvres Libres collection, which features some of the greatest names in French and foreign literature.
The Claude and Felix Lanzmann Association and the Jewish Museum Berlin announce the inscription of Claude Lanzmann's film-monument Shoah (1985) on the UNESCO International Memory of the World Register.