Parents' Guide to

Where Is Anne Frank

By Stefan Pape, Common Sense Media Reviewer

age 9+

Profound animation tackles heavy themes with positivity.

Movie NR 2022 99 minutes
Where is Anne Frank movie poster

A Lot or a Little?

What you will—and won't—find in this movie.

Community Reviews

age 10+

Based on 1 parent review

age 10+

Poignant, moving representation of history

Beautifully done animation, poignant story and comparison of prisoners of war with modern day refugees provide lots of discussion points to have with your children. There are a couple of odd parts that I didn’t think were necessary to the story such as when the characters talk about boys at school who’ve “done it” and also where Anne and Peter talk about male “sex parts”. However, this may have been to represent things that are actually written in Anne Frank’s diary. But on the whole a lovely, captivating and thoughtful representation of the Anne Frank story.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say: (1 ):
Kids say: Not yet rated

This fantastical animation is a truly unique and fascinating route into a story many of us already know so well. Where Is Anne Frank tackles the young diarist's story through the eyes of her imaginary friend, Kitty, who magically finds herself in modern day Amsterdam. What this approach, and this perspective allows, is for the viewer to try and understand what happened to Anne Frank through the eyes of someone who had no idea what had occurred. Kitty is oblivious to the horrors and cruelty that swept across Europe during World War II, learning about them for the first time and trying to make sense of them. Through these innocent eyes we see the atrocities of WWII in a simplified form, which makes the devastation seem even more profound and upsetting -- the sheer tragedy that kids were killed for no other reason than their race.

Yet Where Is Anne Frank also strives to highlight the lasting impact that Anne left behind, the sense of humanity she gave to an otherwise inhumane period of history. Tying the Holocaust to the ongoing refugee crisis feels a little heavy-handed, though it's difficult to be too critical of a story that hammers the importance of love over hate. To top it all off, the animation style is striking, adding to a film that will enlighten and capture the imaginations of both kids and adults.

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