Taupo & Turangi Herald

Idyllic family life hides the horror

Movie a thoughtpro­voking look inside Nazi thinking

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The Zone of Interest (PG13, 115 mins) in cinemas now. In German with subtitles. Directed by Jonathan Glazer

Reviewed by Jen Shieff

This outstandin­g, unforgetta­ble film by Jonathan Glazer opens with a prolonged blank screen. Bewilderin­g, but the perfect way to introduce a remarkably different work of art.

The blankness seems to be an invitation to viewers to open their minds, to prepare for something important.

Rudolf Ho¨ ss (Christian Friedel) is on his way up the ranks under the Nazi regime and, as befits his role as commandant of Auschwitz, he and his wife Hedwig (Sandra Hu¨ ller) live an idyllic rural life in Poland, with their staff, five children and their dog (Dilla) in a large house set amongst Hedwig’s carefully tended roses, dahlias and lilacs beneath a high stone wall, over which is Ho¨ ss’s workplace, the concentrat­ion camp.

While there’s nothing horrific, no victims appear, Glazer implies there’s horror over the wall but subtly, nonjudgmen­tally, he shows that it’s not horror to the Ho¨ ss family.

An alternativ­e view of the Holocaust, seen from one side only, The Zone of Interest takes us right inside Nazi thinking, lifting the lid on Germany in the lead-up to World War II.

Glazer quietly challenges us to consider how the family’s complicity with genocide has come about, to reconsider what we understand history to be: who did what, how they did it and why.

As Hedwig, Hu¨ ller draws us into her highly regulated but outwardly ordinary life of gardening, supervisin­g staff, going on a family picnic with boating and berry picking beside a local river.

Hedwig lives an ideal European woman’s life, despite her knowledge that mass murder is going on over the wall, the delivery of a beautiful fur coat, lipstick still in its pocket, causing her no pause for thought.

The screenplay, co-written by the author of the book of the same title, Martin Amis, and Glazer, is well crafted and spare.

This is one of the reasons the film works so well; others are magnificen­t acting, documentar­y-style camera work with long takes, Mica Levi’s dissonant music and Johnnie Burns’s soundscape. Continuous horrific noises emanate from over the garden wall and ghastly smoke billows from sinister brick chimneys, but to the Ho¨ ss family, except for Hedwig’s visiting mother, Linna Hensel (Imogen Kogge), there’s nothing worth drawing attention to.

There’s a chilling obliviousn­ess to the torment, an obliviousn­ess that’s underscore­d when Friedel’s Ho¨ ss calmly attends a meeting with visiting engineerin­g top brass to agree on a more efficient way of circulatin­g the bodies through the ovens, improving the speed of burn-cool-unload-reload, as if they’re planning improvemen­ts to a factory production line.

One of the Ho¨ ss children’s games even involves one being locked in a greenhouse while another stands outside making gas-chamber-like hissing noises. Dehumanisa­tion is at the heart of the film, which culminates in a brief visit to Auschwitz as is it today, with the tragically ironic motto “Arbeit Macht Frei” (Work makes one free) still inscribed on its forbidding gates, its hillock of remnants providing a graphic warning about what humans are capable of doing to each other.

Five stars

 ?? ?? The Zone of Interest follows a Nazi family living next door to Auschwitz.
The Zone of Interest follows a Nazi family living next door to Auschwitz.

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