12 March 2014

Stolen by Nazis, returned to relatives


The BBC has a report on restitution, a mere seventy years late:
Three paintings seized by the Nazis have been returned to family members of the original owners in France, where museums are required to display works of art identified as having been stolen by the Nazis in the hope that they will be claimed.
Rico says it's the last act of The Monuments Men (photo)...


In a related story, George Clooney (photo, left) and Bill Murray (photo, right) are weighing in on the Elgin Marbles:
The Monuments Men actor Bill Murray has backed his co-star and director George Clooney's view that the UK should return the Elgin Marbles to Greece.
Asked by a Greek reporter if the British Museum should hand the Marbles back, Clooney said: "That would be the right thing to do."
At a London press conference to promote the film, Murray said: "London's gotten crowded. There's plenty of room in Greece. England could take the lead on this." Murray said the Elgin Marbles reflected "a problem all over the world" where artifacts from other countries are on display. The Marbles had "had a very nice stay" in the UK, he added.
Clooney joked he did not really know anything about the issue, following remarks in the Independent from Culture, Media, and Sport Select Committee chairman John Whittingdale, who told the newspaper: "He's an American. I suspect he doesn't know why it is that Britain came to acquire the Elgin Marbles."
The film-maker and actor said: "Even in England, the polling shows more in favour of returning them. There should be an open discussion."
The Marbles were shipped by Lord Elgin to London in the early 1800s, and have been in the British Museum ever since. But the Greek government and many historians want them to be handed back to Greece.
Based on Robert M Edsel's book Monuments Men: Allied Heroes, Nazi Thieves and the Greatest Treasure Hunt in History, the film dramatizes the real-life story of a team sent to Germany during World War Two to try to stop the Allies from bombing historical landmarks and to recover art looted by the Nazis. It features an ensemble cast including Matt Damon, Clooney, Murray, Hugh Bonneville, Cate Blanchett, Jean Dujardin, and Bob Balaban.
But many reviews have been unfavorable; its average rating on the Rotten Tomatoes website is 5.3 out of 10, and it was beaten by the Lego Movie at the US box office in its opening weekend.
Kenneth Turan wrote in the Los Angeles Times: "Earnest and well-intentioned but ultimately inert, The Monuments Men talks a better game than it can deliver."
The New York Times' Manohla Dargis wrote: "Because Clooney can't figure out what kind of story this is, he too often slips into pandering mode, including in his own performance, which is filled with too many smiles and speeches."
But Richard Roeper in the Chicago Sun Times, was kinder, describing it as "engaging, shamelessly corny, and entertaining".
Edsel, who was at the press conference, said he was happy to have his book dramatized for the big screen, adding: "I want to reach the broadest audience possible."
The final word went to Harry Ettlinger, 88, one of the original Monuments Men, who explained what art meant to him, saying: "We would not like life with white walls around us."
Rico says they were stolen fair and square; let the Greeks send in their own team if they want 'em back... (Besides, it was a great movie.)

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