Los Angeles Times

The moving tale of a survivor

- — Michael Rechtshaff­en

Seattle-based filmmaker Leah Warshawski, whose previous effort, “Finding Hillywood,” dealt with Rwanda’s fledgling movie industry, didn’t have to venture as far afield for her next project — she found plenty of inspiratio­n in her grandmothe­r, a Polish Holocaust survivor who, now 91, still works six days a week tending to her tiny tailoring shop.

The resulting “Big Sonia,” co-directed with Todd Soliday, is a tenderly rendered inspiratio­nal piece about the healing power of forging human connection­s that wisely maintains its focus on its spirited, stylish main subject.

When Sonia Warshawski’s not driving to the otherwise abandoned Kansas City mall that houses the warm, clubby establishm­ent opened by her late husband, John, more than 30 years ago, she can be found in schools and correction­al institutio­ns speaking of the atrocities she had long refused to discuss.

While it’s undeniably moving to witness a group of inmates being brought to tears by Sonia’s horrific memories as a teenager in several concentrat­ion camps, it’s ultimately her outlook (the Optimist’s Creed is displayed prominentl­y next to her sewing machines) that strikes such a chord with her captive audience.

Seeing Sonia confidentl­y gripping the leopard-print-covered steering wheel of her Oldsmobile and getting on with her day serves as a potent and especially timely lesson about living a compassion­ate, vibrant life that doesn’t have any room for hatred and bitterness.

“Big Sonia.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 33 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Music Hall, Beverly Hills; Laemmle Town Center 5, Encino.

 ?? Argot Pictures ?? SONIA Warshawski is a Holocaust survivor who talks of the atrocities in the moving “Big Sonia.”
Argot Pictures SONIA Warshawski is a Holocaust survivor who talks of the atrocities in the moving “Big Sonia.”

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