Almost 5 years old now. A Robin Williams flick I picked up yesterday. Its about the Jews in WWII. Its both humorous and compasionate at the same time. There are a multitude of good actors in this movie.
Antal Leisen, Armin Mueller-Stahl, Liev Schreiber, Alan Arkin, Adolf Hitler(as himself), Justus von Dohnanyi, János Gosztonyi, Mark Margolis, and many others.
Jakob Heym (Robin Williams in overbearingly earnest mode) gets tangled in a string of self-perpetuating lies about a hidden radio, supposedly broadcasting news that the victorious Red Army is nearing. His desperate attempts to convince a clutch of insistently idiosyncratic friends (clichés to a man: Liev Schreiber, Bob Balaban, Michael Jeter, Alan Arkin) and obligatory Nazi bad guys that the radio doesn't exist are complicated by the fact that he's stashed a fugitive kid (a dead ringer--sorry!--for Anne Frank) in his attic--and by abundant evidence that lies are the best medicine for the ghetto's skyrocketing suicide rate. Copious unfunny misunderstandings and pratfalls eventuate in this Holocaust rendition of Fiddler on the Roof (you expect Williams to break into song: "If I were a funny man...."). Ultimately, Jakob the Liar loses its way for good in some very ugly violence and a rather nasty final twist: the film's ending might just be rubbing our noses in another feel-good lie. --Kathleen Murphy
Don't really understand what she means about the ending. But this is the 2nd best movie of 2004 that I've seen. (I've only seen Jakob the Liar and big Fish this year so far.)