The Attic: The Hiding of Anne Frank

The Attic: The Hiding of Anne Frank

Year: 1988

Runtime: 95 mins

Language: English

Director: John Erman

WarDramaHistory

In Nazi‑occupied Amsterdam, Otto Frank decides to hide his Jewish family after his daughter Margot is ordered to a labor camp. His office assistant, Miep Gies, shelters them in the attic above the office, risking their safety. The film traces Gies’ effort to keep the Franks concealed as Nazis hunt them, based on her memoirs and Anne Frank’s diary.

Warning: spoilers below!

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Timeline – The Attic: The Hiding of Anne Frank (1988)

Trace every key event in The Attic: The Hiding of Anne Frank (1988) with our detailed, chronological timeline. Perfect for unpacking nonlinear stories, spotting hidden connections, and understanding how each scene builds toward the film’s climax. Whether you're revisiting or decoding for the first time, this timeline gives you the full picture.

1

Nazi invasion of the Netherlands

In 1940, Nazi forces invade the Netherlands, turning life in Amsterdam upside down. Miep Gies, a young office assistant to Otto Frank, witnesses the growing danger as anti-Jewish measures tighten around the city. Otto becomes increasingly worried for his family as the regime crackdown intensifies.

1940 Netherlands (Amsterdam)
2

Otto Frank decides to hide his family

After Margot is summoned for transport to a Nazi labor camp, Otto Frank decides to hide his family to keep them safe. He places his trust in Miep Gies to help, and together they begin planning to live in secrecy. They set up residence in the attic above Otto's office, known as The Annexe.

July 1942 Amsterdam; The Annexe above the office
3

The Frank family moves into The Annexe

The Frank family moves into the hidden attic above the office, beginning their months-long confinement. Miep and the others work to keep their presence secret, bringing food, news, and small comforts while the outside world grows more dangerous.

July 1942 The Annexe (attic above Otto's office)
4

The van Daans join the hiding

A few days after the Franks go into hiding, the Van Daans arrive to join them, sharing the cramped space and added strain on resources. Miep continues to help with supplies and lookouts, preserving the safety of the hidden occupants.

July 1942 The Annexe
5

Albert Dussel joins the group

Several months later, Albert Dussel, a Jewish dentist, joins the group in hiding. The crowded space tests their relationships, but they depend on the steady support of Miep and their other helpers.

1942-1943 The Annexe
6

Helpers keep the hiding secret with supplies

Miep, Jan Gies, Mr. Kraler, Mr. Koophuis, and Elli quietly assist the families, smuggling in food and delivering news from the outside world. They risk arrest and deportation to protect the innocent, maintaining the secrecy of the Annex.

1942-1944 The Annexe / Office
7

Arrests begin: August 4, 1944

On August 4, 1944, the Gestapo arrives and arrests the hiders, tearing apart their fragile refuge. Mr. Kraler and Mr. Koophuis are taken away, while Miep is spared thanks to her Austrian birth and Gentile status; Karl Silberbauer, the Gestapo officer, is also Austrian, which shapes his conduct toward her.

August 4, 1944 Amsterdam (The Annexe building)
8

Anne's diary is recovered

A day after the arrests, Miep and Jan go to the Annex to salvage belongings and find Anne's diary on the floor. She carefully collects the diary, intending to preserve Anne's voice for Otto Frank despite the danger outside.

August 1944 The Annexe
9

Miep's bribe attempt denied

Miep attempts to bribe Silberbauer to secure the hiders' safety, but the officer refuses. The diary remains the only link to Anne as the Annex is emptied and the danger grows closer to home.

August 1944 Gestapo office area, Amsterdam
10

Liberation and Otto's return

With the war drawing to a close, Otto Frank returns to Amsterdam and is sheltered by Miep and Jan. He begins to piece together what happened to his wife Edith and the others who hid with him, reclaiming a sense of family after years of secrecy.

1945 Amsterdam
11

Fates of the Franks and others revealed

Otto learns that Mrs. Frank was murdered in Auschwitz and that Mr. van Daan was gassed there. Anne and Margot, along with Mrs. van Daan, were sent to Bergen-Belsen, where they perished, confirming the tragedy that befell the hidden residents.

1945 Amsterdam / Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen
12

Letter confirms Anne and Margot's deaths

A few days later, Otto receives a letter informing him that Anne and Margot died in Bergen-Belsen, shattering whatever hope remained. Miep shares in the sorrow, honoring Anne's memory and the family’s struggle.

1945 Amsterdam
13

Diary returned to Otto Frank

Miep hands Anne's diary to Otto Frank, a poignant gesture that preserves the young girl's voice for future generations. Otto reads the diary, discovering Anne's thoughts and experiences in the hiding place.

1945 Office / Amsterdam
14

Final image: memory and return to life

In the film's final moment, Miep sits in Anne's room, then leaves the building and cycles home, her voice-over reflecting on memory, loss, and resilience. The simple act of daily life carries the weight of memory for those who did not survive.

End of World War II (1945) The Annexe / Amsterdam

Last Updated: October 09, 2025 at 14:18

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Movies about enduring legacies like The Attic: The Hiding of Anne Frank

Stories where individuals are lost, but their words and memory endure.If you were moved by how Anne Frank's diary survived, explore other movies like The Attic: The Hiding of Anne Frank. These films feature poignant stories of legacy, where personal narratives outlive their creators, offering similar bittersweet historical dramas.

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Narrative Summary

Narratives in this thread often follow individuals whose lives are cut short by historical forces or personal tragedy. The story's arc is not about their survival, but about the posthumous journey of their voice—be it through diaries, art, or the memories of others—ensuring they are not erased by time or oppression.

Why These Movies?

These films are grouped by their shared emotional core: a profound sadness for what was lost, coupled with a resilient hope embodied by the survival of a story. They balance the weight of historical tragedy with the light of preserved memory.

Claustrophobic survival thrillers like The Attic: The Hiding of Anne Frank

Films where characters endure confinement, with terror lurking just outside.For viewers seeking the tense, confined experience of The Attic: The Hiding of Anne Frank, this list features similar movies about hiding from a grave threat. These films share a high-stakes, anxious vibe and a steady buildup of claustrophobic suspense.

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Narrative Summary

The narrative pattern involves characters forced into a confined space for their survival, with an oppressive external force hunting them. The plot unfolds through the daily rituals of staying hidden, the close-quarters tensions between characters, and the slow, nerve-wracking accumulation of near-discoveries.

Why These Movies?

Movies in this thread share a specific atmospheric blend: a tense, quiet tone; a steady, deliberate pacing that amplifies suspense; and a high-intensity emotional experience rooted in the primal fear of being found. The setting itself becomes a primary character.

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The Attic: The Hiding of Anne Frank Summary

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Characters, Settings & Themes in The Attic: The Hiding of Anne Frank

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