I sent these words to some Holocaust educators:
I finally watched Boy in Striped Pajama on a DVD (I had refused to spend the money/time/energy to see it on the big screen), and for me it is better done (in better taste) than La Vita e Bella, and thus worthy of my attention.
What I like about it has more to do with its potential impact, as Peter Fredlake wrote me, that it probably will be shown to students in classrooms and become an alternative to Schindler's List for many. A kind of new Ann Frank film, the Holocaust for children. And it becomes an easy way to discuss the fantasy/hoax of Wilkomirski
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binjamin_Wilkomirski_
In that sense the film becomes a worthy place to bring up, not the Holocaust itself, but the "Holocaust as a state of mind". We knew this would happen, and it is good it is happening in our lifetime when some of us, the children of survivors, might still be able to interact with that kind of statement or "posture".
So the challenge is ours, the educators, to think hard about responses, warnings and whatever else we would like to state about this kind of film, the films that take their inspiration, and only their inspiration from history. Yes, there is a feeling of veracity, and yes the strings are pulled, but that is not enough.
We have plenty of work awaiting us to formulate the best of our thinking.
So I think the film is important in the particular context of "Comparative Filmmaking" (like the recognized field of Comparative Literature) which should be a field in itself, how to read films, not just consume them nor be consumed by them.