I have to disagree with Ricardo about the Shoah documentary. It was shown, over 2 nights, on British TV nearly 20 years ago. And I still feel the horror that I felt as it unfolded. The whole point of the project was to avoid the style of previous work dealing with this subject. No archive film, no holocaust objects just the relentless telling of how this appalling process touched many different lives. The only extra film I remember is a very slow camera moving down the rusted rail tracks towards the Auschwitz gate (repeated many times) and the very occasional shots of the place referred to in a story as it is today. I was completely engulfed in the film (and I watched the whole thing). I came away with overall shock from the complete project infused with details from individual stories (for me the tales of people, thirsty and terrified, peering through the slats of the cattle trucks to see farm workers laugh and draw their fingers across their throats; still brings tears to my eyes.) I cannot put a price on a DVD of this film. How many times would you watch it? How can you put a price on this experience? I just think that the film captured forever, in huge detail, the memories of a group of people many of whom, by now, will have left us. For that it should always be revered. Richard Gardner