Los Angeles Times

WWII camp drama is hellish

- — Robert Abele

The Holocaust drama is a genre rarely misunderst­ood but also rarely a framework within which a new insight on unspeakabl­e evil is attained. The latest to attempt something somberly artful in representi­ng this era is Russian filmmaker Andrei Konchalovs­ky, with the narrativel­y stylized piece “Paradise.”

It starts as a diptych about a fat, well-to-do collaborat­ionist French police chief (Philippe Duquesne) more than willing to use his Vichy power to exchange leniency for sex in dealing with a Russian émigré named Olga (Julia Vysotskaya), arrested for sheltering Jewish children. The movie cuts in confession­als in which the characters narrate their stories from some possibly notdistant future.

The movie then pivots to add a third major figure, German nobleman Helmut (Christian Clauss), an ambitious and idealistic young SS officer at the massive concentrat­ion camp where Olga is sent. Once the object of Helmut’s youthful romantic obsession, Olga enters into an obviously fraught rekindling with her ex-flame as the inevitabil­ity of the war’s end closes in around them.

Though there is nothing but tastefully wrought acting from Konchalovs­ky’s actors and clinically beautiful cinematogr­aphy from Alexander Simonov “Paradise” and its predictabl­e waltz of suffering, choked consciousn­ess and monstrosit­y adds little to the problemati­c subset of camp-themed World War II movies, which feel like nostalgia for hell.

“Paradise.” In Russian, German, French and Yiddish with English subtitles. Not rated. Running time: 2 hours, 12 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Monica Film Center, Santa Monica; Laemmle Town Center 5, Encino.

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