Times Colonist

Zookeeper’s Wife a timely reminder that goodness can rise in face of evil

- LINDSEY BAHR

REVIEW

The Zookeeper’s Wife Where: Capitol 6, Landmark Cinemas University Heights Starring: Jessica Chastain, Johan Heldenberg­h, Michael McElhatton, Daniel Bruhl Directed by: Niki Caro Parental advisory: 14A Rating: Three stars out of four

In German-occupied Poland during the darkest days of the Second World War, a zookeeper and his wife managed to save the lives of hundreds of Jewish people, many of whom were detained in the Warsaw Ghetto, by giving them shelter and refuge on the zoo grounds. This extraordin­ary true story is dramatized rather effectivel­y in director Niki Caro’s The Zookeeper’s Wife, based on the book by the naturalist writer Diane Ackerman.

Caro, who directed Whale Rider and McFarland, USA, imbues the production with a glossy sheen, which, in the confines of trailers and advertisem­ents might make this look dismissibl­e. In mining the drama of the Second World War for cinematic stories, audiences have rightfully been trained to be suspicious of those that look too pretty.

But despite a romanticiz­ed beginning, in which our heroine Antonina (Jessica Chastain) seems to live the most pictureper­fect life that’s ever existed (frolicking with the free-roaming zoo animals, sipping tea on her balcony and gazing lovingly at her doting husband and son), Caro keeps the action and emotion real and grounded throughout. She chooses silences and understate­ment over heightened stakes. This inherently dramatic and amazing story doesn’t need dressing up.

The stage-setting is a necessary evil, but used wisely enough to introduce the characters and set up what will be an ongoing personal conflict that will serve as a sort of microcosm for the war — the friendship with a German zoologist, Lutz (Daniel Bruhl), that turns into an increasing­ly uneasy alliance when the war starts.

Chastain’s Antonina is ethereal, motherly and tenacious. She might be the zookeeper’s wife, but she has just as much if not more of a command over the place as her milquetoas­t husband. In fact, she treats the animals in the zoo as she would her own child. When an elephant’s baby is in distress and near death, Antonina rushes to their aid, calling each by name and telling the mother elephant that everything will be OK if she just gives her space to free the baby’s airway. Don’t worry, this isn’t a Disney movie, there’s no sign that the elephants are responding to the names, but there’s a comfort between human and animal that’s undeniable.

By the time the invasion starts and the zoo is bombed and destroyed, you feel the loss of something that was once just good and pure. It’s distressin­g to watch the occupying soldiers shoot animals whether out of fear, wartime necessity or just plain evil and a reminder that humans are not the only ones who suffer in war.

But the real power of the story is in what Antonina and her husband Jan (Johan Heldenberg­h) do for the persecuted Jews — risking their lives to stage elaboratel­y planned extraction­s from the ghetto and provide refuge in their home.

An already tense situation is made even more heightened when Lutz, now Hitler’s chief zoologist, takes a special interest in their zoo (and Antonina). His presence threatens to derail the entire operation and causes strife in Antonina’s marriage when Jan’s jealousy gets the best of him. It’s a tawdry sideshow, but Chastain and Bruhl make it captivatin­g.

Looking past the sepia and the dreary title, The Zookeeper’s Wife is riveting and inspiring and comes as a welcome reminder in this time of uncertaint­y that even in the face of astonishin­g evil, humanity and goodness can also rise to the occasion.

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