Los Angeles Times

DOESN’T ‘ FADE’ FROM REALITY

- By Gregory Ellwood calendar@ latimes. com

The version of “In the Fade” that lives today is not the movie writer and director Fatih Akin originally intended to make. He had a screenplay, he had financing, but he knew it just wasn’t right. And what he decided to do is almost unheard of.

“I was completely financed, and I didn’t like what I wrote, so I skipped it,” Akin says. “I gave all the money back. And did two other films in between.”

The first incarnatio­n centered on a German man seeking revenge for a terrorist attack inspired by real- life attacks by NeoNazi groups against Turks living in Germany, where justice apparently wasn’t served in the courts. Akin says friends who read that script always had problems with the hero’s motivation. That is until he decided to change the lead to a mother who lost her child and husband in a bombing.

Akin is well aware that the white supremacis­ts’ march in Charlottes­ville, Va., in August has put the activities of such groups front and center in the U. S. He notes, “It confirms that it matters. And it confirms certain things, which are said in the screenplay. These were based on research. I did my homework. I know that there is a network of internatio­nal Neo- Nazis. They’re bound together.”

Diane Kruger plays the mother and eventual heroine in “Fade,” and her harrowing performanc­e took home the best actress prize at the 2017 Cannes Film Festival. The German- born actress felt it was relevant when they were shooting the film, but she had no idea how timely it would become just a few months after its premiere.

“We see lots of films that are about terrible incidents and terrorist attacks, but we really rarely hear about the people that have to live with this terrible incident, that have to stay behind and that are trying to get justice for what happened,” Kruger says. “I think that it’s a very emotional film and a very personal film. I really was attracted to the fact that it’s a very internatio­nal subject, in a way, even though it’s in the German language. And I felt like Fatih was the right director to bring this movie to life and elevate it.”

Kruger says playing Katja was the hardest thing she’s ever done, but she knew what she was getting into with Akin at the helm. She notes, “Fatih is the kind of director that demanded that I take a long time to prep for this. I really, really jumped off that cliff with him. I prepped for at least six months for this role.”

It wasn’t just the preparatio­n or that the role itself was so taxing. Kruger was so exhausted after production wrapped that it took her five months to even consider another project.

“There was never a moment where I felt I could release some of the tension,” she says of the production. “And then you know how life is. While we were filming, my stepdad passed away, and so I was feeling a lot of personal grief myself. [ It was] the darkest time in my adult life that I can remember for many reasons and it just so happened that life and my job collided. I mean, I can see it in the movie, for sure. I know the moments where I can see the darkness that I was in personally.”

Kruger’s character has to deal not only with the death of her son and husband in the film’s first act but also a very public trial where a smart defense lawyer uses her own actions to try to demonstrat­e his client’s innocence. Kruger displays a raw emotion and “utter loss” during some of these courtroom scenes that she also saw in the eyes of the “many, many people” she’d met with who’d had family members in similar bombing attacks.

“There were these unresolved emotions because they never got to say goodbye to their loved ones,” Kruger recalls. “Especially when [ there wasn’t] a real body to bury. And I don’t know, it was something that over months and months creeped up inside of me.”

Akin could see how taxing the role was for Kruger, and shooting in chronologi­cal order didn’t make it any easier. “The scenes where she had to express the most, like the breakdown and all that, [ were] in the very beginning,” Akin says. “And it was very exhausting for her and for me too, because she was so focused. She was so concentrat­ed. I never met such a focused or a concentrat­ed actor in my whole life.”

Speaking almost a year after principal photograph­y commenced, Kruger says she still feels the weight of the empathy she felt for her character and the people she met who’d gone through tragedies similar to recent attacks in Manchester, England, and Las Vegas. “Every time something like this happens, I get this overbearin­g sense of responsibi­lity, and I really understand without it having happened to me personally what those families go through and what it takes to continue living,” she says. “So I don’t know, it’s a movie that means the world to me.”

 ?? Magnolia Pictures ??
Magnolia Pictures

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