THE MOST HAUNTING TRUE STORY ON NETFLIX RIGHT NOW. Drawn from real history, this emotional film tells of 13-year-old Sara, who must step into a new identity to survive a time that tried to erase her. It’s a story of fear, strength, and the will to endure when all seems lost. 💔 “Gripping. Honest. Deeply human.” ⚡ NOW STREAMING — the story that will move you beyond words.

Polish actress Zuzanna Surowy in “My Name Is Sara.” (Strand Releasing)
Sara Góralnik Shapiro survived the Holocaust by disguising herself as a Christian and working for a family of Ukrainian farmers. She then went on to live a long and prosperous life as a member of Detroit’s Jewish community.
Her story is incredible on its own merits, and it’s hardly surprising that someone might one day want to make a film about it. “My Name Is Sara,” the latest dramatic production by the USC Shoah Foundation, is now seeing a nationwide rollout three years after it was made.
The foundation has recently broadened its mandate from backing documentary works about the Holocaust to dramatizations, including the recent HBO film “The Survivor.” “My Name is Sara” follows the young Sara (first-time Polish actor Zuzanna Surowy) as she and her brother, Moishe, flee the Nazis in 1942, the rest of their family having already been slaughtered. At Moishe’s suggestion, the two split up and Sara, under a fake name, throws herself at the mercy of a farming couple. She wards off their immediate suspicions that she is a Jew by successfully performing the sign of the cross; later, for her first meal under their roof, she enthusiastically eats a plate of pork.
Her ruse an early success, Sara and her story quickly fade into the background as the domestic drama of the farmers (played by Michalina Olszanska and Eryk Lubos) takes center stage. In addition to marital problems, they’re also struggling to make ends meet as they are harassed and intimidated by both Soviet “liberators” and violent Jewish partisans, with Nazis also glimpsed from time to time. It’s a thread of potential interest to budding historians curious about how Eastern Europe’s non-Jewish working class fared under World War II’s occupying forces, but less relevant when it comes to understanding Jewish survival.
Director Steven Oritt, a documentarian making his dramatic-feature debut, and screenwriter David Himmelstein, whose previous credits include Sidney Lumet’s “Power,” sprinkle in moments in which Sara’s true identity threatens to be exposed. At one point, she’s overheard reciting the Shema prayer to herself in a nightmare; at another, the family pushes her to dress up as a “Jew” for their holiday party, and she dons an antisemitic hook-nosed mask and payot (sidelocks worn by many Orthodox men) as the others dance and sing around her. Surowy reacts to these moments with a sort of wide-eyed blankness, a baseline level of existential terror that never truly fades.
Hundreds of Holocaust movies have already been made, and many of them have gone deeper in exploring the inner lives of their characters than “My Name is Sara” does. The new film shows the character struggling with the external pressures of hiding her identity, but does little to unpack what it must have been like for her to obscure her Judaism for an extended period of time as a way of surviving the genocide of the Jewish people.
One scene hints at what such an exploration could have looked like, as Sara encounters another lost Jewish girl and teaches her how to recite the Hail Mary, a central Catholic prayer, as a way of evading detection. By the end of the film, Sara has reclaimed both her name and Judaism — hers being one of the very few Holocaust stories with a happy ending.
News
He wasn’t supposed to be there…: After 8 days of searching, Auburn student James “Weston” Higginbotham was found in a remote mountainous area outside Kyoto — miles from where his phone last went silent, and that one detail is leaving everyone with the same question
The conclusion of an intense, eight-day international search operation has left an entire community enveloped in grief, yet the discovery of James “Weston” Higginbotham has introduced a profound tactical mystery that investigators are now scrambling to decipher. The twenty-year-old Auburn…
BREAKING NEWS — Weston Higginbotham’s body has been found, but what haunts his family and rescue team is his heartbreaking condition when it was discovered
The agonizing suspense that has gripped the family of James “Weston” Higginbotham and the Auburn University community has culminated in a devastating conclusion, bringing a heartbreaking end to a week-long multi-national search. The young biosystems engineering student, who vanished while…
PLEASE TELL ME THIS ISN’T TRUE… Family members say investigators recently asked whether James “Weston” Higginbotham was helpless when he saw the item rescuers found by the river
The deepening mystery surrounding the disappearance of James “Weston” Higginbotham has taken a profoundly somber and unsettling turn, plunging his family and the community into a state of heightened distress. In a case already marked by a series of chilling…
He never went anywhere without that watch…: Family members searching for James “Weston” Higginbotham said investigators are now trying to locate it because they believe it contains his FINAL WORDS
In the forensic landscape of a missing person case, certain items transcend their material value to become profound symbols of identity, habit, and potentially, the ultimate truth of what occurred. For the family of James “Weston” Higginbotham, that item is…
The situation may have changed. A newly interviewed witness says they remember seeing James “Weston” Higginbotham bending down to look at something in his hand after the last official CCTV footage. His message is making her tremble
The dynamic nature of a missing person investigation has been starkly illuminated by a dramatic turn of events in the search for James “Weston” Higginbotham. While previous efforts focused heavily on analyzing his final known digital footprints and physical belongings,…
“He asked me a strange question…” A friend of James “Weston” Higginbotham reportedly shared parts of their final HEALTH conversation with investigators, who are now trying to determine if it took place less than 30 minutes before the Auburn student disappeared
The complex architecture of a missing person investigation often relies on the final conversations a person had before stepping into the void, as these interactions provide a window into their psychological state and immediate intentions. In the ongoing search for…
End of content
No more pages to load