hdelihle .l .l - representingtheholocaust
Transcription
hdelihle .l .l - representingtheholocaust
,hdelihle Shadows Film and tlte llolocaust Third tdition rl .l .l .l .l .l Annette lnsdorf a r-ãa rP tr' l :... 'i ¡ ¡'t , I I I I ¡ ¡ t C¡,rvrnmDGE PR-ESS UNIYERSITY I I t I rl 271 The lronic Touch way of her access. She and her family archives consistently places obstacles in the - loyal parents, husband, an d to sPeak at ' Sånja writes the book a Jewish nced the local university. There, or Juckenack' he -...hu.tt during fuorld War II. Because the charges. At the end' Sonja is honored he sues her for defamation. Later, he drops She violently refuses' screaming with the offer of a bust of her image in thã town hall. a tree (earlier associated with in hide ,".r.r, away to that she won't be coopted, 1t The lronic Iotlch prayer as well as soliditY)' "nd ' îrr. opening of rhe Nasty Girl sets up the film's self-consciousness through an ¿Chi.rãr. an old German intricate boxes" structure: (1) Men drink beer and sing folksongthatwasappropriatedbytheNazis.Thisfragmentturnsouttobepartof context' (2) The qpical disclaimer of a later scene, and is disturbing in its lack of ral result of remembering. r as remember - 1o analyze onfront the audience with n number of recent films have succeeded in creating fertile discomfort through the use of dark humor, from Michael Verhoeven's The Nasty Girl and My Mother's Courøgeto such controversial "comedies" as Genghis Cohn. Others, such as Tiain of Lrfr, Lrf, Is Beautiful" and Jakob the Liar, use humor as a balm and buffer, with comic heroes whose ruses are tantamount to resrstance. The Nasty Girl (Das Schreckliche Madchen, 1990) is based on the real experiences of Anja Rosmus, born in 1960 in the Bavarian town of Passau. She won the Scholl Prize, an annual award in honor of Hans and Sophie Scholl - martyrs of the resistance movement about which Verhoeven earlier made The White Rose - for her work as a historian unearthing the Nazi past of her hometown. On the night of the awards, she was seated at the same table as Verhoeven; within two years, he had directed a fictionalized version ofher stor¡ starring Lena Stolze (who played Sophie Scholl in borh The'Nhite Rose and Percy Adlon's The Last Five Days!). The Nasty Girlwon the prize for Best Director at the Berlin Film Festival - and the New York Film Critics Award for Best Foreign Fitm - not simply because of the compelling story or the fine acting, but for the ironic style with which Verhoeven chose to tell it. Muyb. the distancing devices of Brechtian self-consciousness are necessary, given that the originai town of Passau was where Eichmann married, where Himmler grew up, and where Hitler lived for a while as a boy. Sonja (Stolze) tells her story to a German TV creq chronicling her evolution from a bright twelve-year-old daughter of two teachers, to a troublemaker in her town of Pfilzig because she wants to write an essa¡ "My Hometown during the Third Reich." She at first thinks it will be about the resistance of the church, but her research shows the opposite, and alienates her from the hypocritical Bavarian townspeople. In the black-and-white past, she first kisses her teacher Matin (Robert Giggenbach) under a tree. He returns two years later (in color) and they soon marry. Sonja has already won an essay contest, leading to prestige and a trip to Paris, and now wants to write a new essay. But the older peopìe simply don't want to talk to her about the Nazi past. She sues the town to get access to files, but even after she wins, the head of the "coincidental" adds an ironic touch' all resemblance to real people"or events being ..pi" Nibelungen" is equally ironic, given the discrepf:; R p.intea quotatio; fr-r, about warriors. (4) Lena àí.y U.*..r, ihe opening beer guzzlers and the Norse sagas rgh above the street (as she will symsPeaks not from the end Point ofthe chael Verhoeven, " I wanted to show T I I I ) Graffrti are being washed offa building' 1945? where are you now?" as organ before but we can still read "where were you music rises and the credits unfold' WhenSophieaddressestheaudienceandshowsslides,theydonotworkright, of technology interrupting her. we are thus made aware of the presence s style often f orriUiiit¡ i"frich Verhoeven åt tfr. U.gin.ting, she then talks directþ - including tuking place. This is heighteîed by the sÀ levels on which storltelling as a disruptive narration the many ation - is color' and the placing back-projection, uses Verhoeven firru[i ìo a bright p"l.ã.. Moreover, "points up this remarked, Wilson David As image. actors before a þreviously frlmed forgetting."2 the artifice with which the town has åmouflaged its Inoneofthefilm'smoststrikingscenes'thefamilyseatedintheirlivingroom seemstobemovinghorizontallythroughthebustlingbutoblivioustown,asifthe over the marketplace.) The walls had disappeaiedl (The set was mãving on a track "I wanted director acknowledged that his style was intentionally antirealistic: some 'reality."' whereas not is showing I'm what that the audience to be reminded devices' David Denby was viewers might be irritated by the obtrusiveness of these effect'forces us to right to point out that "sucú use ofthe anti-realistic'alienation see deceit."3 the material as a parable of German defensiveness and appreciate the potencan one doctor, medical a as Given verhoevens training tially "theraPeutic" effects metaphor likening the dan nored pops uP somewhere to behave - "Resistance is very un-Germ clever and gutsY rej magazine,"ittakes ,L Arcl but she's really e d ín Time Ïl::l:l mYsterY' 218 wðrld war nts' which are an important country' t Anja Rosmus went on to complete a master's degree in sociology, German litera_ ture, and art. Her 1993 book, wíntergreen: suppressed Murderers,was a real dismem_ berment of the Bavarian past. As the washington poslreported in 1993:..Rosmus wields history like an ax. The storybook town of passau. . . is chopped to flinders. Behind the town's white-washed facade she reveals aplacewhere eviithrived, where hundreds of foreign children died in labor camps and orphanages,. . . where at least 1,700 prisoners of war were massacred in the closing days of 279 The lronic Touch Third Edition Update more European, German way part ofthe history ofmy in present-day tserlrn - to show ons the frlm opens and closes told from a modern German PersPectlve. characters who Tabori's story a train frlled with Indeed, verhoeven added to ortray the in j resemble frgures German bourgeois II.,'s verhoeven continued to give cinematic life to wartime Germany and its legacy in My Mother's courage ( 1996), the fictional reconstruction of a true story abóut the deportation of a Hungarian-lewish woman. Together with The white Rose anò. The Nasty GirI, it can be considered the third part of his trilogy confronting wartime guilt as well as postwar amnesia. Based on George Tabori's pla¡ first staged in 197g, the film takes place during one summer day in 1944: EIsa tbori (pauline collins), a cheerful Hungarian-lewish woman, is suddenly arrested and set on a path to Auschwitz. using touches of rather black humor, My Mother's courage fulfills its title when Elsa boldly convinces the supervising ss officer that she has a Red cross pass. Miraculousl¡ she returns to Budapest in the train compartment of this officer, a vegetarian who sees no irony in telling her he cannot stand the idea of a creature being hacked to death. ir'.* rr,,,, t ltand Grosz ned bY unmasked ,i:åi;industry, of the'the r vIPs took military gi-,ett the relativeiy slight-German Nazis forceful initiative of the Hungarian blacktrain Hungarywas simply a Hun garianaffatr'The industry .n..""nå appalling participation of German and criminal doctors'" a title that Elsa Tabori's storr -_wfile verhoeven makes it clear with 500'000 Occupation' German the before i" ff"ngary aqpical: out of 760,000 itï' were killed. true rs MyMother'sCouragewasreleasedinNewYorkatthesametimeasAself-MadeHero' With an acutely ironic and distancin g gaze,Verhoeven leads the viewer to reflect on how history is represented. The multiple openings of My Mother,s courage are as intricate as those of The Nasty Girl: onvideo, a German man denies that he ever took part in the deportation of Hungarian fews (he will later appear as the SS officer); George Tabori greets the audience with a smile, and his voice-over narration begins; images of Germany's famed Babelsberg studio are accompanied by another male voice - which turns out to be that of Josef Goebbels in a newsreel; and on the set of the film, Täbori's eightieth birthday is celebrated by cast and crew. Lest a filmmaker himself feel guilty for reproducing or "using" the Holocaust to make a fiction film, this self-conscious layering provides a frame and a reminder that what is inside the frame is fabricated. "we have no right to assert that this is Jacques Audiard's attest not onlY to audiences, but to a historic collabo Nazis'Final Solution to French the¡ovel by lean-François Henry) Le (with Alain hand. In Audiard's u¿upi*ion in World the cirance to be a hero earlv Deniau, Atbert (M"thiå'K;;;;;Ë;i""d fabricating others' tf" i"" he appropriates-the true stories ofthe trust of those in War II. At the end äün:i-*,rte "f tntït"tft Resistance' He earns new identity u' u t"t*Ut' ãf rank of Lieutenant Colonel' power and is promoted to the a Audiardoffersawryviewofjusthoweasyitwastornventapastintheconfusion was ..This *"' *i*irre grear lie that gave birth to my generatron of Ig44_1g45. Festival' Film Tþlluride resis"ter," h. ,uid aithe 1996 built up, num.ly F."rr..-u, u *u, reconstruct lts reality," said verhoeven during an intervieq "preciselybecause it is a true story. No, it only a reflection. The dimensions of this horror, of this truth, are so unimaginable that I could never'really' reproduce them. This is why I make it clear that it is a film, ofzealous Self- "This is a countrythai"ntt n"t tt"rs g""t lre.i.A identity and its virtue "î"ì"ã " is 'performance."'6 My Mother's courage - which won both the Bavarian Film prize in Germany and a special award from the Jerusalem Film Festival contains visual allusions to movies from chaplin's The Great Dictator to claude Lanzmann's shoah. verhoeven thus acknowledges that his film is part of a now established international genre ..the Holocaust film" - and that there are dangers inherent in a form like the ..dócudrama,', which purports to re-create history. "cinema can only approximate reality,,' he a tradition that U.gut;th M*ttî Opn"t't Thi Sorrow s to cinematic an :,1i:un : it consists of frlms had more to und ultiÁately expos-e how^victims:lÌ1i:: than from German ott"pllll-' ø". a"* French denunciation or arrest into the Aubrac'probes even mo-re ¡alnfullf Claude Berri's rsôi ;ouit' Lucie Aubrøc Lucie -based' But heroes by one of'tn.i. own. betrayal of French R.rirturr.. with combined braverv woman's líkelvly Mother's C";;;'"';;in: "": 'to.1o1o"t "oldor "melodramatic" critics because of its luck- was qrrestioned i'y some French iu,r.,ti.,g nlmmakers - even after movies fashioned,, f".*. whit.tw;;ä*;ïi*ti' from France tttut insisted. t"pfott rangingfromF,ut'çoi'Truffaut'sLastMetrololouisMalle'sGoodbye'Children-the seems to lie in its irony' *,t noropt*-"fp-t"*t' in the 1990s firsthand' he these directors k¡ew the period Audiard *uirrtuirrJithut'*h...", nor a reconmovie Hero ís "neither a nostalgic did not. co.rr.qrr..rif-e'iri¡ ¡r1r¿, Gulf War' the was film do this originality of The more perfectly cinema is able to imitate realit¡ the more questionable I find it particularly with this subject. I would rarher use drastic changes of sryle including slapstick - and homage to films, so we all L-now, "this is cinema." while I admire the intentions and effect of films such as schindler's List,I have to find my own way a - made me want to struction. The decisiá evení that - J Third Edition Update and the manipulation of images around it." Like My Mother's Courage, A Self-Made Hsro includes an eye-winking outer frame that distances the viewer: an older Albert (|ean-Louis Trintignant) recounts the tale to the camera, and we see musicians playing. Subsequent shots ofthe orchestra self-consciously reveal that they are performing thã soundtrack of the movie! Audiard thus fulfills an adage of fean-Luc Godard, "The only reality in a film is the reality of its own making." A related - but far more disturbing - cinematic image of French wartime behavior can be found ín Dr. Petiot (1990), based on one of the most bizarre criminal cases of the tr,ventieth century. Born in 1897, Dr. Marcel Petiot was both a kindly physician iller, a member of the Resistance and a psychopath, a D elected mayor of his vi t for his extreme behavior, he was and Gestapo pawn. in scandals related to fraud, minor school, he was frequently involved robber¡ and patients who died after treatment. He moved to Paris where, in the early 1940s, he helped Iews who were fleeing to more hospitabie countries. But, as Christian de Chalonge's re-creation reveals, Petiot (brilliantly piayed by Michel Serrault) created his own crematorium in his basement furnace. Albeit on a small scale, and with no attempt at ideological justification, he was also killing Jews. Petiot was arrested by the Gestapo, tortured, and imprisoned for eight months alongside Resistance members. He absorbed the sentiments of the resisters, and upon his release in lanuary 1944, assumed a new identity. He so convincinglybecame a patriotic leader that he was given the post of Captain of the First Regiment. His mission? To find and interrogate collaborators - including a certain Dr. Petiot. At his trial, Resistance heroes came forward to testiflz to his courage and dignity' Petiot wrote a book in prison - Love Conquered - copies of which he autographed during his trial. From this material, de Chalonge spent six years developing Dr. Petiotwith coscreenwriter Dominique Garnier and Serrault (best known for his hilarious performance in Lø Cage aux Folles) . They structured the script in three parts - a day and night in 1942, twenty-four hours in 1943, and three days in 1944 - using a heightened poetic style that recalls German Expressionism. The film opens with newsreels of the Paris Exhibition that teaches how to identifr iews. Together with the doctor, we are in a movie theater, and then a German vampire fiim begins. Petiot stands up so that his shadow on the right balances that of the Dracula figure on the left. By paying homage to Nosferatu, Murnau's classic vampire frlm, de Chalonge achieves two effects: he self-consciously reminds us that we too are watching a film (as will be the case lvhen Petiot is discovered in a movie theater, symmetricall¡ at the end), and he sets up a man whose darker identity emerges at parallel between the v wanted the whole first part to have an night. As the director with a gradual increase in color, leading atmosphere of nightm up to an explosion of blue, white and red at the liberation of Paris. We're here to amplify fact through poetic transposition. Surreal expressionism reveals more truth than direct recital of fact." Michel Serrault as Dr. Petiot. PHoro couRrËsY oF ÀRIES FIL\ls 282 The lronic Third Edition Update While seemingly loved by his patients, wife, and son, Petiot is a strange and brusque doctor, listening via secret microphones to patients talking in the waiting room, or diagnosing without a full examination. He appears to be a generous, risk-taking Resistance hero who helps Jews to be smuggled across the border. But after he vaccinates his patient Nathan - who thinks he is headed for Argentina Nathan's trip is merely to the doctor's furnace. (The filmmakers actually met people who knew Petiot: some said, "He saved my life"; others claimed that members of their family were his victims.) Petiot is quite manic, throwing hidden money in the air, driving his bicycle and cart at night - looking like a bat - and working for the French Gestapo. Although clearly not a Nazi, he destroys mainly Jews; at the same time, he is kind to a sick little girl and refuses to take money from her parents. A fire in his "crematorium" leads police to discover the corpses. Petiot escapes and, by 1944, has adopted the name of Dr. Valery and is working for the Resistance. He writes a letter to the press, which is published in the newspapers, leading to his arrest. End credits tell us that he was guillotined in May 1946. His last words, "I'm a voyagen who takes his baggage with him," leaves the mystery of his motivation at the heart of the film - not unlike Iago's refusal to speak at the end of Othello. A truly self-made hero, Dr. Petiot remains a disturbing enigma. The coexistence in one man of demonic power, manic humo¡ and paradoxical congeniality links Dr. Petiot with the character of Adolf Hitler devised by Armin Mueller-Stahl for his film Conversation with the Beast (1996). Directed by the renowned German actor from a script he cowrote with American screenwriter Tom Abrams, this English-language black comedy posits that Hitler did not die in 1945. Rather, as played by Mueller-Stahl in his directorial debut, he lives on: the vain, capricious old codger is now a hundred and three years old but looks seventF (a pactwiththe devil?). Webster (Bob Balaban), anAmerican ]ewishhistorian, arrives from the U.S.A. to ascertain if this is really Hitler o6 more likel¡ Andreas Kronstaedt, an actor who impersonated him. He is greeted by Hitler's beautiful wife, Hortense (Katharina Bohm), supposedly decades younger. Hitler tells him that Goebbels had engaged six doubles - one for each day of the week besides Sundays - to impersonate him for purposes of security and public appearances! And he insists that it was Andreas who killed himself in the Führer's place because he was playing him on that day ofthe weekl Flashbacks in black-and-white include an outrageous wedding party after the war: all the doubles are in attendance and get into a childish fight. We also see how Hitler tried to tell others that he was the real thing, but was never taken seriouslynot by the West, nor by the East, neither by the Americans nor by the Russians. Webster believes he has found proof that this is Hitler after tracking down (in Paris) a sixty-eight-year-old deaf-mute who is allegedly Hitler's son. On the tenth day of the interviews, Webster decides to kill Hitler, who seems indeed to be yearning in vain for death. Although Webster has a hard time summoning the nerve, he .We never see if he really dies. But, as Hitler had flnally shoots Hitler in the heart. said earlier: "if you kill one person, they put you in jail. Kill fifty million, and you are immortal." (At a Washington Iewish Film Festival panel on December 8, 1986, Mueller-Stahl acknowledged that the script began with this sentence.) The film thus raises provocative questions: could Hitler still be alive? or merely his spirit? If this is in her sixties but looking four Touch 2tl¡l would one have to Hitler, can one have sympathy for the character? If he were alive, kill him because justice is too slow? quotes Chaplin: there are Líke My Mother,s Cou,age, Conversation with theBeasf To Be or Not to Bewhen doubles references to The Greøt Diciator, and to Lubitsch s words: recite Hamlet's speech at the wedding' In Mueller-Stahl's IfyouwatchBrecht'sArturo(JiorlubitschorChaplin,Hitlerisfunny.Wlneedour III, the character. we have al. the other "beasts" on frlm - Richard distance to cteate Napoleon,Frankenstein_butwealwaystlytoavoidthisbeast.Iwatchedhisspeeches: ridiculously overdone' if you turn offthe sound and take away the audience, it's so seems Having excelled at playing lews or men marked by war' Mueller-Stahl has been he category' former the In Hitler' t""y like the päf.., actor-directo,lo .n"*o.u^bl.i., AvøIon,shine,atdlnthePresenceofMíneEnemies;inthelattercapacit¡ in Axel corti's God was the Archduke Ferdinand in colonel RedI, t}re deserter he Doesn,t Believe and the Polish rescuer who lusts after the Jewish role as Jessica Lange's woman in his care in Aígry Harvest.And who can forget his costa-Gavras's drama father in The Music Boß. ít *u, pr..ir"ly when he was making in us Anymore, world war II that about the discovery of his character's criminal behavior during began writing his directorial debut' Fulford wrote persuasively Even before seeing conversatíon with the Beøst,Robert on frlm the calamity ínfhe Toronto Gtobeif n.,gusf2l,I996'." tueller-Stahl embodies guilt-of the whole German of central Europe in this lentury. He carries the pain and history on his narrow world behind his china-blue eyes, the burden of a monstrous 25yeats eloquently represents shoulders. The leading German frlm actor of the past a culture drenched in guilt and regret'" In Washington, Mueller-Stahl's approach is as ãurious as it is thought-provoking, he elaborated vpon Conversation with the Beast: he but a monster. What is Hitler without power? A sill¡ It was Hitler's wish to become either a painter or óthers. to hurt childish man trying Hitler wasn t a human being anactor.Unfortunatel¡hebecameapolitician.Iwouldhavepreferredthathebean actor.IwastryingtoshoottheideaofHitler,atleast_inadesperateattempttoget there' rid of Hitler. Of course you can t get rid of him' He'll always be GhostlycontinuityisalsoathemeinthewickedlyfunnyGenghß.Cghn.whereHitler isinvokedduringthecreditsequenceasapupPetinthehandsofaJewishcomedian. in 1993 for the BBC' Directed by Elijah Moshinsþ (a director of numerous operas) cohn, a novel by Genghß price of is adapted from The Dance the script úy sianley LindsaY), the Police chief Cohn (AntonY Sher), the ile investigating a series of surely turns Schatz into but slowly ic, who choppedJiver-lovingJew.Ashisbehaviorbecomesincreasingly ,., tti, ;oU, not to mention his identity' By the end' Genghis Cohn stor¡ ás we see how the ghost of Cohn takes over the increasingly receptive Schatz. C o ur age,Moshinsky Much like Verhoeven in both The N asty Girl a¡d My Mother,s treatment effectivelysardonic forhis us juxtaposes five different openings thatprepare 284 The lronic louch Third Edition Update of serious themes. As we hear "Bei Mir Bist Du Schoen," Cohn performs on a Berlin stage in 1933: his Hitler puppet with a Yiddish accent not only reduces the Führer to fewish "shtick" but foreshadows two later scenes of Schatz's deterioration. The themes of spectacle and identity transfer are developed in the second scene, with Cohn's routine as a rabbi on a 1936 vienna stage. under his costume is another that of a Nazi with a swastika. As in the first ventriloquism scene, Genghis Cohnseems to ask, who is in control here? with images of both the |ew and Hitlei sharing rhe same comedian's bod¡ the film lays the ground for the introduction of Schatz. In the third scene, the tone changes: from the upbeat yiddish tune and brightly lit stages, we move to a dark and silent nightclub. This is 1939 warsaw, and the camera is behind cohn onstage as he says, "I frnally died in. . ." cut to the comedian in a concentration camp uniform, getting offa truck. At the Nazi order to shoot, he yells, "Kich mir in tuches!" (Yiddish for "Kiss my ass") before the machine guns kill him. The cut to a very different spectacle - a high-angle shot of a swimming pool in which precision dancers perform-is jarring. we are suddenlyin 1958 Bavaria, where police chief Schatz is being lauded for maintaining the lowest crime rate in the state. The Baroness Frieda (Diana Rigg) invites him to her elegant home, where another spectacle provides uncomfortable humor: when he opens her dead husband's closet, bright lights around an SS uniform express schatz's awe. As he dons the boots of this Nazi war hero, triumphant trumpets sound. Encouraged by Frieda to try on the uniform - and to ravish her - he is abruptly stopped by. . . cohn in the mirror! He runs out into the street, still wearing the SS uniform - fly open and looking like the Hitler dummy of the opening scene. The second sighting of Cohn is equally ambiguous, as Schatz glimpses him through the glass of his goldfish bowl. A¡d even the third time in Schatz's glasses - the visual distortions su - cohn reflected not "really', there. But when Cohn says, "ever since that '- referring to when Schatz ordered his death in Dachau to stay. And Schatz's investigation of a serial killer who attacks during orgasm leads him to tell his men, "People are too scared to shtup" (Yiddish slang for intercourse), without cohn even being visible. These scenes might be merely amusing were it not for the exploration of guilt, redemption, and identity transfer that Genghis cohn offers. This is, afrer all, a Bavarian town like that of Th e Nasty Girl:beneath the bucolic surface are killers not simply the serial murderer but an ex-Nazi "mass murderer" who escaped proseculion for war crimes. schatz conjures up cohn precisely when donning an SS uniform. while the ghost initially frightens him, Schatz grows quite affectionate with his new :ompanion. He becomes so fond of Jewish delicacies that when Frieda visits him, he ;erves chopped liver, and utters the Yiddish toast, "Lchaim." By the time cohn takes him to a synagogue to say Kaddish (the prayer for the dead), the Hebrew words seem ;o emerge from Schatz unprompted. If the words were within him to begin with, has Sohn led him to repentance? After being glimpsed in the Jewish house of worship, Schatz is deemed unbalrnced, and he is forced to be examined by a female psychiatrist. Although she cannot ;ee Cohn, the audience is hilariously aware that he is "pulling the strings,', making lchatz into the "Hitler dummy" of the fllm's opening scene. And by the time schatz ;ings "Bei Mir Bist Du Schoen" for heç we know he won't be police chief for long. His including a Jewish star painted in red on the wall - and Schatz aPPears in a new .na,,rp running a kosher foãd stand. C ' ghost in his home' .rr".rs fif.. fruger, who shot him in Dach e Cohn s presence' They go to Scñatz's stand: the former polir (presumably by neo-Nazis), he Urrt .Jrr.rot see him. When Schatz is then beaten up the very Person he tried to s"ys, "ri.h mir in tuches," having - in a sense - become house is destroyed - n walking on a busy street in the Present earing his concentration camp uniform' shocked' His voice-over ruminates' "It's front of Burberry's fashionable window ..It couldnt happen again, could it?" without answering these questions, the fi'lm termed Jewish' Given works with and because of a resilient irony that could be - - your yellow "we've heard enough of schatz,s earlier dismissal addressed to cohn, appropriate to 1993 than to stars, ovens - it,s all becoming a cliché" (a line more |958),GenghisCohnpresents=anewtakeontheHolocaust,withapsychological with the Beast suggests that the revenge thai is both sweet and bit ter.If Conversation that the fewish spirit world"can never get rid of Hitler, Moshinsþ's frlm demonstrates cannot be killed either. TheveryfactthatGenghisCohnbeginsinaself-consciousandstylizedmanner can be taken at face value' renders the film a cineåatic cartooriin which nothing ThisnarrativeframingiscomparabletotvvosubsequentñImsofthelgg0sthatposit antidote to Nazi dehumanization. To differing ðegrees, Trøin .Jewish resiliency as an (La vita è beua, Iraly, |997) of Life (Train de yie' France' 1 99 8 ) anð' Life Is Beautiful (Roberto ,í....¿ in using humor as a weapon, botir within and beyond the stories. devices dista-ncing with Benigni's oscai-winning internaiional success also opens Train of which?nsure that we do not take scenes as "reality'') But ,rr.h"", slapstick, Life - ðir ectedbY Romanian-born effective had it begun with a great Shlomo (Lionel Abelanski) narrates a incredible things happen' In real, therebybegging our suspension of disbelief when take his advice: they the face of imminent deportåtion, ingenious |ewish neighbors (really Mordechai the "Nazi" general build their own train, make costumei for the Woodworker,playedbyFrenchactorRufus)aswellastheGermansoldierstheywill real Nazis arrive, they are impe.ro.rut.. Àtfroogú ,n.y manage to disappear before the who want to blow members C..*""i but by ttre Resistance not only byth. a German roadblock up their "..r.*y'; train. Least pla wise rabbi (Clement d' which turns out to comPriseòof freedom in Russia' ach Harari) takes the Gypsiås along in the t from behind narrating is Shlomo Only in the last shoi of the fili do we see that -åu..d, barbed wire, in a concentratron camP uniform' Theatre, said that Mihaileanu, who was once u *.Åb.. of the Bucharest Yiddish seeingschindler,sListhadagreateffectonhim:"ontheonehand,Iwasverymoved feel that we can no longer by it,'; the press kit recalls. 'Rt ttre same time, I began to in the context of tears and solely wa¡ keep telling the story of the Shoah in the same subject' I wanted to telì the not but horror. . . . My theorywas to change the language 286 The lronic Ïouch Third Edition Update the tragedy through the most |ewish language there is - the tradition of bittersweet comedy. It was a desire to go beyond the Shoah - not to deny or forget the dead, but to re-create their lives in a new and vivid way'' The Klezmer-inspired score by Goran Bregovic succeeds in capturing the prewar vitality of shtetl life, and kain of Life (which won the Audience Award at the 1999 Sundance Film Festival) is clearþ sympathetic to the Jewish characters. It is most effective when Mordechai - having assumed the identity of a Nazi - takes his role as general too seriously. But the frlm is marred by caricatures like Yossi (Michel Muller), who goes from being the rabbi's assistant (and a "mama's boy") to a pedantic Communist. The script for Train of Lifewas allegedly sent to Roberto Benigni, who was offered the role of Shlomo. But even if it inspired asp ects of Life Is Beautiful,the results of the two frlms are exceedinglydifferent. Life Is Beautifulisnot,strictlyspeaking, a movie about the Holocaust. Winner of the Grand JuryPrizeat the 1998 Cannes Film Festival, and the Academy Award for Best Foreign Film as well as for Best Actor, Benignit fable is about love, and the extremes to which a brave and clever fellow will go for amore.But because the second half of the film takes place in an unnamed concentration camp during World War II - after a very funny first half - it provoked controversy. During the frrst hour, Guido (played by Benigni), an Italian lew living in 1939, will do an¡hing to be near the beautiful schoolteacher, Dora (Nicoletta Braschi), including taking risks and braving ridicule. Midway through the frlm - coscripted by Benigni and Vicenzo Cerami - they are happily married, but the Holocaust has reached Tuscany: our comic hero and his son, Giosue (Giorgio Cantarini), are taken to a concentration camp, where Guido will do an¡hing to protect his child. This includes a "fantastical" element: when a German soldier asks for a translator, Guido comes forward (even though he doesn t speak German). As the Nazi barks orders and instills fear, Guido farcically translates the orders into a game so that his son will not be frightened. Indeed, from the very beginning, Benigni is careful to establish that his film is a fairy tale rather than realism. The voice-over narration introduces a "fable," and the slapstick of the first hour is obviously movie magic. We meet Guido in a car whose brakes fail as he approaches a crowd waiting for Fascist ofÊcials: his raised arm to warn them about the brakes is misunderstood, as they respond with the Fascist salute! His clownish personality proceeds to render Life Is Beautiful a comedy. Politics are reduced to jokes in the first half, as when Guido asks a man about his political beliefs then retracts the question upon hearing that the guy named his children Benito and Adolfo. Similarly, he impersonates a Fascist minister at a school: considering the scrawny and buffoonish body Guido reveals as he strips to his underwear, his speech about his "Aryan" body parts is hilarious. The hints of political danger remain in the background. Being Iewish, Guidot Uncle Eliseo (Giustino Durano) is roughed up by "barbarians," to which he elegantly replies, "Silence is the most powerful cry." At the engagement party of Dora and Guido's wealthy nemesis - where Guido is a waiter - black shirts are visible, and the word "|ewish' is painted on Eliseo's horse. To the horror of Dora's mother (Marisa Paredes), the beautiful young fiancée jumps onto the horse with Guido and rides off. Arr ellipsis brings us to wartime ltaly: Dora and Guido have a son, who is confused by concentration camp into a game to Guido (Roberto Benigni) turns the a¡rival at an unnamed PHoTo: Protect his son (Giorgio Cantarini). RESERVED. RIGHTS sERGlo sTRlzzl. coURTESY oF MIRAMAX FILMS. ALL 288 The lronic Touch Third Edition Update of all time in the United States (since surpas Life Is Beautiful could be seen in English muted: for example, while carrying his sleeping bo¡ Guido approaches an indistinct pile of corpses in the fog. Since the skeletal bodies are clearþ painted, the image is blatantly unreal, reminding us that we are watching a stylized representation rather Among other Jonathan Nichols as Guido)' introduction to the Holocaust for childre than "reality." English removes the film even furth Numerous critics chafed at the Nevertheless, the character of Lessing (Horst Bucholz), a Nazi physician, seems all too accurate. This dapper doctor is introduced in the Grand Hotel, where Guido is his crowd pleaser. Thane Rosenbaum' for 23, l9g8,"Life Is Beøutiful maY be Yet exploiting the images and symbols of favorite waiter because they share a passion for riddles. ("Once I say your name, you disappear" turns out to be "Silence.") When he is dispatched to Berlin, he says Guido is the most "ingenious" waiter, and Guido calls him the most "cultured" customer. This will be turned on its head a few years later, when Lessing is assigned as doctor in the very camp where our hero is imprisoned. He gets Guido a position as a waiter for the Nazis. But just as he (and we) think the physician will tell him how to escape, the "cultured" Lessing merely obsesses about a riddle. His inability to see things in balance suggests the myopia that allowed educated Germans to become Nazi doctors. Guido is finally shot, off-screen, but Giosue has learned well from his father how to hide. When the camp is liberated, he is rescued by an American, rides in a tank (which is what Guido had promised as the prize in their elaborate game), finds Dora, and yells, "\Me won!" She assumes this refers to the war, but he means the game, culminating in the tank. (For cynics who attacked the film, it also presciently refers to the Oscars that would follow.) Benigni is not the first filmmaker to juxtapose humor and Holocaust horro¡ nor the first to elicit controversy. Already in The Great Dictator (1940),Lubitscht To Be or Notto Be(1942), and LinaWertmüller's SeyenBeauties(1975), black comedywas used as a weapon against Nazism as well as indifference. Chaplin played two parts - the ranting Nazi and the victimized fewish barber - giving Hitler, Mussolini, and other mad megalomaniacs a comic kick. Benigni told me during an interview in Cannes that The Great Dictator was his great inspiration, and that the number on Guido's camp uniform is the same one that Chaplin's barber wore. As in To Be or Not to Be, þing - or improvisation - becomes the means to survival. For example, when Giosue accidentally blurts out " grazie" (thank you in Italian) among the German children being served in the camp, Guido quickly teaches all the kids to say the word grazie out loud. As in Seven Beauties-whichwas shot by the renowned cinematographer of Life Is Beautiful Tonino delli Colli - the Italian protagonist is a clever clown: the very ingenuity that Guido employed to win Dora is what keeps his son alive in the camp. Life Is Beautifulbegan as a motion picture and turned into a phenomenon for two main reasons: the aggressive marketing campaign of Miramax, its American distributor; and the criticism it provoked from some intelligent critics. As with Schindler's List a few years earlier, commercial success and a string of major awards rendered Benigni's effort suspect among intellectuals. Its multiple Oscar nominations coincided, uncoincidentall¡ with the nominations accumulated by Shakespeøre in Love, also a Miramax release. When the latter won Best Film (over Saving Private þan) as well as Best Actress for Gwyneth Paltrow - it was clear that Miramax's massive advertising campaign had paid off. To see Paltrow and Benigni (the frrst actor since Sophia Loren in Two Womento win the Oscar in a foreign-language film) "crowned" together indicated marketing muscle. The phenomenon grew when Miramax decided to create and release a dubbed version of Life Is Beautiful in 1999. After becoming the most successful foreign film 289 depends on atrocity for e about death, and, in their aftermath' me (p' 1 used as a soundstage for slapstick' the Mayor's Prize althe Jerusalem Film ..iltrrr. that Theodor Adorno, "No PoetrY after Au an memoirs from the survivors tltemselves out of the ashes of Auschwitz, and to atte His moral outrage was matched by that February importan Allowed" about the reality of racial laws and Nazi "survivors" at the end of the film are Do Iewish. in Cinema: Hoberman, speaking at "The Holocaust of the Ci Center sentation'- a confãrence át the Graduate inappr and "narcissistic" l99g called the film J. in March - frame of reference. Liþ Is Beøutiful, however, is not set Frei" sign. The Nazis created a sPectrum extermination. Benigni's father, for exam exterminatio that was not designed for ii" Albania when Italy stopped fighting' So when Germans (non-Jewish) futn", *ut i"ttt*ltbotgen' a camp that had no found Italian soldiers, they brought them to gas chambers or crematoria'". ' stories at night of the camP: Life Is Beautiful was also with Milan s Center for Contemporary about this era, when eight thousand It .4" (if un turned out to be strfüngly similar (NewYork) of March 26,l999,anat ered archival records of the American The lronic Third Edition Update the story of )oseph Schleifstein." Born in 1941, |oseph was sent with his parents to Buchenwald inL943: "In the general confusion of lining up . . . )oseph's father found a large sack and, with a stern warning to keep absolutely quiet, placed his 2ll2-yearold child in it. . . . foseph remained in Buchenwald - hidden from the Nazis with the help of his father and two German anti-fascists - until the camp was liberated by the U.S. Army on April 12, 1945, according to the fiIe." (|oseph was subsequently reunited with his motler, who survived Bergen-Belsen.) Thewhereabouts ofloseph Schleifstein were unknown when the article appeared. One month later, the headline on the cover of the April 23, Lggg, issue was, "Life Is BeautifuI Child Breaks 50-Year Silence." Schleifstein had been located for an interview by The Jewßh Weelç and recalled details of Buchenwald more incredible than what Benigni devised. According to the article, he was "initially hidden by his father. But eventuall¡ he said, the Nazi guards learned of his presence and used him to take roll call in the morning. 'I remember saluting them,'he said. 'I became the Germans' mascot and would sa¡ "AIl prisoners accounted for." . . . I guess they didn t feel a need to kill me.'. . . But when there were formal inspections by visiting Nazi officials, he said he was hidden." A-fter the war, schleifstein kept his wartime experiences a secret from his two children: "'The perception of people who went through the Holocaust was that they were damaged stuff" he explained. 'I didn't want that stigma.' " This second article by stewart Ain also quoted the book Hitler's Death cømpsby Konnilyn G. Feig, which mentions not only a boys' choir at Buchenwald, but how "in the final weeks of the war, a 4-year-old bo¡ Stefan lerzy Zweig, was smuggled into the camp in his father's rucksack. During inspections, the boy was gagged and tucked beneath the floorboards. Zweig later immigrated to Israel and in 1964 was an all-star player on the Israeli national handball team." while stories such as Zweig's and Schleifstein's are obviously rare among the innumerable Jewish children slaughtered by the Nazis, they provide a bit of support for defenders of Life Is Beøutiful. The question at the base of the debate is whether humor can coexist with a cinematic representation of the Holocaust. (Theatrical representation was given widespread critical and box-ofÊce approval wh en The Producers a musical comedy based on Mel Brooks's fi.lm - opened on Broadway in 2001.) A persuasively affirmative answer was ofÊered by the critic Colin MacCabe in the British periodical Sighr and Soundof. February 1999: comedy is the genre that celebrates the social. Tiaditionall¡ comedies end witì a marriage' confirming the power of society to reproduce itself. Tiagedy is the domain of the individual, traditionally ending with the death of the hero who can t conform to the demands of the community. Liþ Is Beautiful takes for its subject matter the Holocaust - the attemPt to build a new social order on the systematic extermination of an entire race. The horror of the camps defies all genres. In a world where murder is an instrument of state policy, all notions ofthe individual or the social are negated. Benignit magnificent frlm attempts the impossible: to make a comedy out of the Holocaust, to find an affirmation of society in the death of all social relations. To the extent that humor can heighten our understanding of the human condition, its prohibition in art seems senseless. Black comed¡ for example, has been an antidote to systematic insanityin greatworks ofliterature and film. As Edward Rothstein wrote in the Nøw YorkTimesof.October 18, 1998 -praisrngLifelsBeautiful-"Humor louch most unmay be, in its essence, anti-fascistiq It takes what is most self-important' it into absurdity. Fascism meets its match ¡eídingandmostunforgiving, anddissolves i' f"r..l . . . For doesrlt fáscisà itself seem like a form ofhlpnotic enchantment, bindparticularþ ing a nation to join in its singular horrors?" (There is indeed something Itiian dell'arte' about Bánigni's methõds, reachingbackto the tradition ofcommedia he survived in a manne¡ ¡emarkably similar to the little foseph Schleifstein in Buchenw¿ld, where DISTRIBUTION coMMITTEE boy n Life Is BeautifuL yuoto couRrESY OF THE AMERIC.{N JEWISH JOINr ARCHIVES. 292 Third Edition Update MacCabe alludes to this in calling the actor-director "the supreme European clown of his generation," while Rothstein reminds us that in the Italian commedia dell'arte, the buffoon often faces death.) I I The extraordinaryinternational popularity of LifeIs Beautifulmeans that audienceswhich might otherwise not have been aware ofthe Nazi persecution of Italian Jewryembraced an appealing iewish hero who inspires respect rather than merely pity. It may have smoothed the way for the release of a Hollywood film in September 1999 (one month after the dubbed version of Life Is Beautiful): Jøkob the Liar invited, inevitable - and often unflattering - comparison with Benignit benignly made fable. In this remake of the East German film of 1974 - both based on the novel by ]urek Becker, who died in 1997 - we once again find the improvisational comic skills of a jewish protagonist used to both save a child and lighten the movie's tone. The lies of Jakob (Robin Williams, also the executive producer of Jakob the Liør) are not just for Lina, the little girl he has found and hidden in his room, but for an entire Polish ghetto in 1944. This version is directed by Peter Kassovitz, who had been a fewish child in Nazioccupied Budapest. He and his parents survived, and emigrated to France during the 1956 Hungarian Revolution. Although Kassovitz is based in Paris, and the ñlm was shot in Poland and Hungar¡ Jakob the Liør has a distinctly "Hollywood" tone. fakob accidentally hears a broadcast about the Russian advance on a German ofÊcert radio. Then, to stop his friend Kowalski (Bob Balaban) from hanging himself, he claims to have a radio himself (a crime punishable by death). He tells the young boxer Misha (Liev Schreiber) the same thing, to stop him from assaulting a German. Word spreads, and suddenly Iakob is a hero of hope. Only Professor Kirschbaum (Armin Mueller-Stahl, who appeared in the original German film) is on to him; nevertheless, he helps preserve the illusion because the suicide rate in the ghetto has dwindled to zefQ. Whereas the original lakob, der Lugner questions the protagonist's lies because they prevent the Jews from organizing and resisting, the American version simplifies by making his lies the impetus for resistance. And whereas the original Jakob is not killed onscreen, Williams's character is more like Benignit - shot as a resister because he refuses to announce that there was no radio. Most problematic is the ending, reminiscent of the coda in Korczak instead of the freeze-frames on each |ew in the transport four'din Jakob, der Lugner, the remake literalizes one of Jakob's fantasies rescue by a Russian tank, accompanied byAmerican swing music. This ending invites a kind of revisionist hope, suggesting that Hollywood is |akob, preferring illusion to the depiction ofgritty reality. Like all good fairy tales, these films are symbolic rather than literal, allowing our imaginations to confront dark forces as well as love. Ultimatel¡ the lies of Iakob and Guido may be as much for themselves as for the children they are protecting: they too desperately need to escape Nazi dehumanization by putting on a happy face. The audience is led to identify, not onlywith the desire to protect a child, but with Jakob and Guido's ability to enter and sustain a grand illusion - which is, after all, what a viewer does in a movie theater. tysfunctiolt as üistortion: Ïhe [lolocatlst Survivor oll Screen afld stage ional survivor is pervasive, long-standing' deranged Vietnam War veteran onscreen' pictures. The survivor's damage has been '::îî:l;äïj,,?iläïî,ililiJ"};"i In two films the images were more subtle - and perhaps, therefore, more insidious. produced plays two as well as releasediuring 1996, Shine and Thi Substance of Fire, survivors Holocaust the that year in NÀn¡ York - OId Wicked Songs and The Shawlare either tyrannical, suicidal, or mentally unhinged' Helfgott' and Shine, fheflustralian drama that recounts the true story of David a father pla¡ share acclaimed The substønce of Fire,adapted from fon Robin Baitz's and Isaac figure who is 'âamaged goods." Peter Helþtt (Armin Mueller-Stahl) as dictators depicted are and Cäldhart (Ron Rifkin) crãate dysfunctional families, dramatically b9 may image This unable to really hear what their sons are saying' true to a more viable than presenting "normalry" or adaptation - and is perhaps a distortion. ultimately is small segment of the survivor population - but Shiiq ðirected by Scott Ui.kt fro* an original screenplay Uy IT Sardi' is a child prodigy, to deeply moving frlm biography, tracing David Helfgott's life from when David 1980s, the earþ in begins institutionalirãd ,..l.rr.]to brilliant pianist. It stumbles Actor) Best for Award (Geoffrey Rush, who won a well-desãrved Academy sequence' credit opening the from into a wine bar on a rainy night. It is apparent logorrhea with David's profile on the edge of the black screen, that he has a kind of "oh' that humorously breathlessly åpeated phrases,-witty fragments followed by an well from behind his very reality objective goes do*n fivã notes - and doesn t seã thick glasses. (Mueller-Stahl) Flãshbacks reveal that he is the son of a Polish-Jewish immigrant but Peter competitions, wins David children. silent wife and four who tyrannizes his (NoahTäylor) won tallowhimto acceptoffersto studyabroad. Byhislateteens, David and is essentially defies his father, goes to the Royal college of Music on a scholarship, Parkes Professor by trained is pianist eccentric disowned by Peter. In London, our (sir John Gietgud) and decides to tackle the "Rach 3" - Rachmaninoff's toughest d'ring the applause. ii"... H..o-fletes the challenge triumphantly, onlyto collap5g is the chain-smoking, he later, Years Àfter the breakdown, he is institutionalized. 314 Notes to Pages Notes to Pages 217-240 12. Ibid. The novice directors are even more gratified t}rat audiences are sensing connections between the film and contemporary problems. "Among people who have se et As If It Were Yesterday at festivals," Abramowicz recalled, "there was one woman from Buenos Aires, for example. She said, 'This is what is happening with us now in Argentina. We have to hide our friends, to organize, to falsifr documents.' We hope the fi.lm shows reactions on a human level, using the Holocaust as a backdrop. lews died because they were fews, because ofwhat they represented in society. But ultimatel¡ people are beckoned every da¡ everywhere, for whatever reason, to combat persecution." 13. Pierre Sauvage, "Weapons of the Spirit: Alovney Home," The Hollywood Reporter,March 17,1987, Section S, 241-278 375 18.|oanDupont,..RomanPolanskiand.Frartic]',NewYorkTimes(ArtsanòLeisure),March The the títle p.36. (Le feips du Ghetto ís distributed in the U'S'A' under 27,1988, Witnesses.) The Holocaust as Genre Harper's Magazine' Augttst 1985' 1. Leslie Epstein, "Atrocity and lmagination," 14 2. Ibid., p. la. 3. ä.gírLa Kr"."o p' 16' physicalRealiry (New York: Theory of FiIm: The Redimption of University Press, 19ó6' P. 305' er, oxford p. 20. 14. Ibid., p. 21. 15. Author's interview with Katherine Smalle¡ fewish Museum, New York, November 13, 16 Rescuers in Fiction Films and sometimes grey tones, but never on the keylight side. we used silhouettes, . ' ' Schindler's Listl' In Camerq about talks "fanusz Kaminski In go black." we let h.1¡ ã face t. l.l*urrt.d 1988. Summer 1994'P.22- 13 l. From Judgment to lllumination 2. This and other quotations are from authort interview with Peter Morle¡ London, 3. is never mentioned in the frlm that Kitty is lewish. When I asked the director he replied: "Kitty doesn t particularly identifr herself as being |ewish. I didn't want to nail it to the bannerhead at the very beginning. I felt this film should be a new way of perceiving Auschwitz, and there were more non-lews than fews killed. I didn t want this to be another thing about lews and the Holocaust, but about people who were incarcerated and incinerated there." wh¡ 3. JohnToland,"CanTVDramasConveytheHorrorsoftheHolocaust?" TVGuide,Febntary 13, t982. 4. This and other Ophuls quotations, 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. as well as quotations from Mme. Solange, Anthony Eden, and Pierre Mendès-France, are from llAyant-Scène du Cinêma l27ll28 (IulySeptembe¡ 1972): 10, 14, 65. Jacques SícIier, LaFrance dePëtain et son cinêma (Paris: HenriVeyrier, 1981), p. 251. rbid. Author's interview with Marcel Ophuls, Paris, |une 1981. Terrence Des Pres, "War Crimes," Harper's, fanuary 1977,p.88. Ophuls was nevertheless adamant when I suggested that the fllm is more illuminating than judgmental: "There has to be judgment. There's nothing more shitty than the term 'non-judgmental.' What would be the use of trying to communicate the difficulty of reaching judgment, if the working hlpothesis is that there is no necessity for it?" This and later quotations are from Des Pres, "War Crimes," p. 89. Author's interview with Marcel Ophuls, New York, October 2, 1988. All subsequent quotations are taken from either this meeting, a phone interview in Paris on fune I l, 1988, or tJre New York Film Festival press conference held on October 3, 1988. fames M. Markham, "Marcel Ophuls on Barbie: Reopening Wounds of War," New York Times (Atts and Leisure), October 2, 1988, pp. 21, 27 . A¡nette Insdorf, "Shoah: Testimony More Amazing Than Fiction," Los Angeles Times, December 31, 1985, pp.7,9. Subsequent quotations are from this interview Ophuls's rousing assessment of Lanzmanris "deceit" is worth quoting: "I can hardly find the words to express how much I approve of this procedure, how much I sFmpathize with it. This is not a matter of means and ends, this is a matter of moral prioritiesÌ' From Marcel Ophuls, "Closely Watched Tiains," Alrl erican FiIm, November 1985, p. 22. ls. Ibid., p. 20. 16. Ibid.,p.18. 17. Simone de Beauvoir, "The Memory of Horror," IlExpress, Aprl,28--29, 1985. l" quent quotations are November 1980. 2. Curiousl¡ it 1 989' p' 6 1' Schindler's Lisr, screenplay by Steven Zalllian' |uly .Kor., BostonPhoeni, November 15, 1991. Subse..save the ihild, Annette Insdorf, 17 The lronic Touch from this article' New York' October 8' 1990' My unpublished interview with Michael Verhoeven' p' 24' Z. pávid Wilso n, Monthly FiIm Bulletin, ]anuary l99l' p' 97 ' 3. David Denb¡ New York Magazin¿, November 5' 1990' 15' 1990'p' 29' October 4. Richard Corliss, Time Magøzine, Nazi Pastl' Washington Post' 1993' 5. Rick Atkinson, "Bavaria'sTNasty Girl,' Clawing at the Awa¡' New York Times (Ans artd 6. Annette Insdorf, "The Moral Minefield That won t Go Leisure), August 3I' 1997. 1