Director: Jonathan Glazer
Genre: Drama
The camera always stays on the outside of Auswitz. At most, we see furnaces burning in the distance and the plume of smoke from a train pulling. But we here a lot. Rumbling machines, shouted orders, gunshots, cries of pain. Because of the sound design of the film, the Holocaust is always extremely close. No matter how hard the film’s characters are actively not dealing with it. And crucially, we follow the perpetrators.
Glazer explores how people, if they are incetivized enough to tak advantage of extreme human suffering, can turn away from the atrocities we ourselves commit. Directly or indirectly. Hedwig Höss has not merely created a beautiful house with an amazing garden for herself, she is willing to fight for it. For a piece of greenery with a swimming pool, were, admittedly, you can always hear Hitler’s death machine roaring and the ashes of victims gently descending. “This is our home”, she tells her husbans, “exactly as Hitler wanted it for us”.
Both Christian Friedel and Sandra Hüller do not seem to acting so much as temporarily living in the skin of the characters. The family is filmed as naturally as possible during everyday actons.
The movie doesn’t really have a story, it’s more an experience. And it’s a very uncomfortable one. Occasionally a character seems to be aware of the inhuman context, everyone else puts it away. And constantly you are made aware of those circumstances.
It’s only a little over 100 minutes long, but it feels so much longer. It’s a slow burn and not an easy watch. It’s the implication of the horror that is going on, on the other side of the wall that make this film so difficult to watch. And it will most likely be your only watch. This film challenges you to understand that these people banish their perception of those horrors from their personal experiences of the here and now. And also to see that some children grow up thinking that such conditions are normal.
Rating: 4/ 5
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