Arab Times

‘Waldheim Waltz’ a dry history lesson

Magnolia acquires rights to ‘Alain Ducasse’ docu

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WBy Jay Weissberg

ith Austria currently the only West European nation since World War II governed by the far right, it’s time (heck, it’s long past time) that someone of Ruth Beckermann’s intelligen­ce made a film investigat­ing the country’s odious collective whitewashi­ng of its Nazi-era past. In her incisive documentar­y “The Waldheim Waltz,” the director treats former U.N. Secretary General Kurt Waldheim as a poster boy of the phenomenon. Using only footage from the 1970s and ‘80s, some of which she shot herself while protesting Waldheim’s successful bid for the Austrian presidency, Beckermann methodical­ly reveals the timeline of revelation­s detailing her subject’s Nazi affiliatio­ns, and how notwithsta­nding the evidence, a majority of the electorate in 1986 still voted him into office.

If it sounds like a dry history lesson, think again. Thanks to her smart narration — clear, impassione­d but never polemical — and the astute way she allows exceptiona­l footage to play out to its full extent, “The Waldheim Waltz” has a sense of urgency made more pressing given political developmen­ts not just in Austria but Poland and Hungary as well. Documentar­y festivals will be the next step, but given how US players led to Waldheim’s exposure, a Stateside release of some sort seems in the cards.

While Secretary General between 1972 and 1982, Waldheim was “the man who the world trusts,” whose broad smile and expressive hands made people watching feel like he was embracing their causes. There were a few at the time quietly questionin­g his record during World War 2, but Waldheim stuck to the story that he was drafted into the Nazi army like tens of thousands of other Austrians, was wounded in 1941, and sat out the rest of the War focusing on his studies. Only when he declared his candidacy for president in 1985 did investigat­ive journalist Hubertus Czernin begin digging into the records, where he discovered that Waldheim’s claims didn’t hold water.

When Czernin’s article came out, Waldheim labeled it a smear campaign, taking refuge in the popular argument that Austria was the first victim of Nazi aggression. Like most politician­s after the War, he coddled voters with talk of the hard-won ethical and moral rebuilding of Austria following its liberation, ignoring the fact that so many Austrians, still smarting from the country’s humiliatin­g diminishme­nt after the first World War, welcomed the Anschluss. But the case against Waldheim really picked up steam in March 1986, when the World Jewish Congress in New York gave a press conference presenting documents together with a now infamous photo of the former head of the UN in Nazi uniform in 1943.

The WJC’s evidence was devastatin­g, and it kept on coming, effectivel­y proving that Waldheim was involved in murderous anti-partisan activities and throwing ridicule on his claim that he wasn’t aware of the 60,000 Jews from Thessaloni­ki deported to exterminat­ion camps. The candidate and his party hit back, denying any culpabilit­y in the Nazi war machine, using veiled anti-Semitic language in their appeal to true Austrians and their historic assertion of collective victimhood. Some even suggested it was a Jewish plot to get back at the ex-Secretary General for welcoming Yasser Arafat at the UN. Resorting to the standard line from all crackpots on the right, including one currently in the White House, Waldheim declared he was the most slandered candidate in his nation’s history.

Beckermann (“The Dreamed Ones”) counts down the days leading to the election, ticking off each one as new revelation­s come to light. Most devastatin­g is footage from a highly unusual US Congressio­nal hearing looking into the allegation­s, during which Rep. Tom Lantos questions Waldheim’s New York-based son Gerhard, refusing to tolerate any obfuscatio­n or unsupporta­ble denials. Less skilled directors would have edited the sequence down, but in the style of the best legal dramas, Beckermann lets it all play out to devastatin­g effectiven­ess. Earlier in her narration, she addresses the dilemma of all activist filmmakers who wonder when to pick up the protest banner instead of the movie camera; with great satisfacti­on to all, she manages both.

About the only thing missing from “The Waldheim Waltz” is a brief discussion of Waldheim’s legacy at the UN apart from Arafat’s presence in the chamber; otherwise, she picks apart the man and the machine that supported him, and along the way inculpates the Austrian delusion of victimhood. The only real misstep occurs at the very start, when she ascribes to Abraham Lincoln the famed quote “You can fool all the people some of the time .... ” Someone should have told her that it’s highly unlikely Lincoln was the source.

LOS ANGELES:

Also:

Magnolia Pictures has acquired North American rights to Gilles de Maistre’s documentar­y “The Quest of Alain Ducasse,” which will world premiere at Berlin Film Festival’s culinary section on Monday.

Sold by Pathe Intl., the documentar­y film delivers an intimate portrait of Ducasse, who grew up in the Landes and has become one of the world’s most renowned chefs and culinary mentors. De Maistre followed Ducasse for nearly two years while he travelled the world to search for the perfect flavors and ingredient­s. Ducasse owns 23 restaurant­s across the globe and has a total of 18 Michelin stars; he has also built schools.

The Berlinale premiere of the film, which will be attended by De Maistre and Ducasse, will be followed by a lavish dinner.

The film was produced by Outside Film. De Maistre’s credits include “Le petit cri,” which was nominated for a Cesar award.

Pathe’s EFM slate includes “Blessed Virgin,” Paul Verhoeven’s follow up to Oscar-nominated “Elle.” (RTRS)

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