Edmonton Journal

Of pain and morality

- CHRIS KNIGHT cknight@postmedia.com twitter.com/chrisknigh­tfilm

IN THE FADE ★★★★ out of 5 Cast: Diane Kruger, Denis Moschitto Director: Fatih Akin Duration: 1h46m

Movies are whatif fantasy machines, prodding us to imagine what we would do in various permutatio­ns of love or hate. In the Fade, the latest from German director Fatih Akin, presents a most extreme example, after Katja (Diane Kruger) loses her husband, Nuri, and sixyearold son to a terrorist bombing. It’s an empathy gutpunch.

Leaving aside the loss, her road isn’t easy. The police immediatel­y question her Kurdish husband’s political affiliatio­ns and religious background. And when Katja takes drugs to dull her pain, it raises the spectre of whether the murder had some connection to his former life as a drug dealer.

She has her own theory, based on a blond woman who left a bombladen bike outside her husband’s office: “It was Nazis.” The film, which includes a lengthy trial and its aftermath, will eventually prove her right, though that won’t necessaril­y make things any easier for her.

Kruger’s performanc­e anchors the film; she appears in every scene (often smoking), and her journey through grief and into a kind of numb desire for justice (or is it vengeance?) won her the Cannes bestactres­s prize when the film premiered there last year. It also won the Golden Globe for best foreignlan­guage film of the year.

Akin, who is of Turkish descent, buffets his central character with unexpected gales. Her motherinla­w delivers a short, stinging rebuke at the funeral, while the father of one of the bombing suspects proves to have unexpected reserves of humanity. Yet regardless of the circumstan­ces, we never lose sight of Katja’s own decency, even under layers of pain and anguish.

The film’s threepart structure ends with a twist that will raise at least two questions in most viewers. Would I do this? And do I want her to? You may find yourself hoping Katja succeeds in her quest to get past what has happened. You may want her to fail, or find another way. You may even waver back and forth on the issue. But you won’t forget it.

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