Baltimore Sun

Levinson film details boxer’s Holocaust ordeal, aftermath

- By Lynn Elber

In “The Survivor,” filmmaker Barry Levinson reaches back 80 years to tell the grueling story of a boxer who put the lives of fellow concentrat­ion camp prisoners at risk to save his own.

The moral and psychologi­cal repercussi­ons for Harry Haft are why Levinson, the Oscar-winning director of “Rain Man,” was drawn to the project based on a book about Haft’s Holocaust ordeal written by his son, Alan Scott Haft.

“This is not about the life of somebody in a camp. It’s the fragments of what happened in the camp, and what happened there to survive,” Levinson said. “Now he’s trying to get on with life and struggling with it.”

Haft must face the questions of “how do you have a life, how do you have a full life?” he said.

Starring Ben Foster, “The Survivor” debuted on HBO and HBO Max April 27 to mark Yom Hashoah, or Holocaust Remembranc­e Day. It honors the 6 million Jews who died as part of Nazi Germany’s mass murder of European Jews.

The film, written by Justine Juel Gillmer (“The 100”), dramatizes Haft’s experience in Auschwitz, a central part of the Nazi death camp system. An estimated 1.3 million people were deported to Auschwitz in Germanoccu­pied Poland and at least 1.1 million died, according to its museum and memorial website.

A teenager when arrested, Haft is among those kept alive as slave labor, held under horrific

conditions and given tasks, including the disposal of bodies. Always ready with his fists, Haft is given the chance to take part in boxing matches, becoming an amusement and source of betting income for German officers.

As depicted in the film, the champion goes on to fight again; the loser’s fate is likely death. Haft is driven to prevail in the ring by love — he longs to be reunited with Leah, his childhood sweetheart. Convinced she will somehow survive imprisonme­nt and the war, he lets nothing stand in his way to do the same.

While Haft’s Holocaust experience is a brief part of “The Survivor,” Levinson said, it permeates it “because in his head he can’t let it go.” The story follows Haft as he begins life anew in America, pursues a boxing career and starts a family, even as he continues to search for his lost love. Haft died in 2007, at age 82.

Vicky Krieps, Peter Sarsgaard, Danny DeVito and John Leguizamo co-star with Foster in

“The Survivor.”

Foster met the demands of playing Haft from the skin in. He’s unrecogniz­able in the part.

“I just don’t think I could live with myself if I had shown up and lost 15 pounds, when you scratch the surface of any kind of research on (the Holocaust) and look at these human beings who are reduced to bone,” he said.

As he was learning to box, the actor said, he also wanted to discover how thin he could get and still fight.

“It was a strange, obsessive need to know my own limits, rather than check ... a box of, ‘Actor lost weight, good,’ or ‘Actor gained weight, good,’ ” he said. He was so fully immersed in the tormented Haft and his world — including putting Holocaust and Auschwitz photos on the wall — that he found it hard to shake off the set.

“It was important for me to be able to close my eyes and see what was chasing him ... I suppose it works if you’re having nightmares. I suppose you’re doing your job, if you’re having that person’s dreams,” he said.

In the afterword to 2006’s “Harry Haft: Survivor of Auschwitz, Challenger of Rocky Marciano,” Alan Scott Haft, the eldest of three children, says his father wanted to share his story and had pushed him to write the book.

“He could never escape the memories of his years in the concentrat­ion camps. He lived with nightmares his entire life,” his son wrote.

 ?? LEO PINTER/HBO ?? Ben Foster stars as concentrat­ion camp prisoner Harry Haft in Barry Levinson’s film “The Survivor.”
LEO PINTER/HBO Ben Foster stars as concentrat­ion camp prisoner Harry Haft in Barry Levinson’s film “The Survivor.”

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