For 28 years, a population of wild rabbits lived in the "Death Zone"—the grassy no-man’s-land between the inner and outer layers of the Berlin Wall.
While humans risked their lives to cross, the rabbits found a bizarre utopia.
is a uniquely poignant 2009 Polish-German documentary directed by Bartosz Konopka . It offers a "rabbit's-eye view" of one of the 20th century's most defining structures: the Berlin Wall. 🥕 The "Rabbit Paradise"
The film serves as a powerful political allegory for life under socialism, where citizens were "closed but safe," provided for but stripped of true freedom. 🏚️ The "Catastrophic" Freedom
For 28 years, a population of wild rabbits lived in the "Death Zone"—the grassy no-man’s-land between the inner and outer layers of the Berlin Wall.
While humans risked their lives to cross, the rabbits found a bizarre utopia.
is a uniquely poignant 2009 Polish-German documentary directed by Bartosz Konopka . It offers a "rabbit's-eye view" of one of the 20th century's most defining structures: the Berlin Wall. 🥕 The "Rabbit Paradise"
The film serves as a powerful political allegory for life under socialism, where citizens were "closed but safe," provided for but stripped of true freedom. 🏚️ The "Catastrophic" Freedom