Baltimore Sun

Director changed by work on ‘Zone of Interest’

Grazer says darkness of film detrimenta­l to his mental health

- By Joshua Rothkopf

To hear him describe it, eyes lighting up and arms blocking out the imaginary space, British filmmaker Jonathan Glazer has a happy place, his small postproduc­tion studio in London. “It’s like a lab, actually,” he says, “just a room, but this size — a bit bigger. Twice the height. There’s a little mezzanine level up there, screen on the wall.”

Glazer then drops in his collaborat­ors: “Mica’s writing, Paul’s cutting,

I’m making the tea,” he continues, referring to

Mica Levi, the inspired, once-in-a-generation composer whom Glazer first worked with on 2013’s “Under the Skin,” and Paul Watts, his longtime editor who dates back to their videos with Massive Attack and the Dead Weather. “We’re moving around, with one person informing the other.”

Meanwhile, sound designer Johnnie Burn is on video hookup all day from Brighton, sharing ideas, trying out remixes on the fly. “It’s all very like that,” Glazer says. “And I think the fact that we are in the space together is how we get to where we get, because we are all in conversati­on with each other and with the film.”

Paradoxica­lly, the film that has emerged from this happy arrangemen­t is “The Zone of Interest,” Glazer’s radical, disquietin­g reinventio­n of the Holocaust drama set just on the other side of the Auschwitz camp wall, where a Nazi commandant’s family somehow pretends to enjoy its private garden. The film has earned five Academy

Award nomination­s.

As creatively nourishing as Glazer’s setup sounds, making the film was not easy, a process compounded by the director’s Kubrickian penchant for preparatio­n and perfection. He spent a combined total of 19 years on his last two features, two on “Zone’s” postproduc­tion alone.

“I’m not somebody who’s going to call up an agent and say, ‘What scripts are out there? Send me something good,’ ” Glazer, 58, says. “It’s just not the world I’m in. It’s more something which happens inside me, which compels me to go down a certain road.”

Glazer’s work on the movie began in earnest in 2014, when he first read the novel “The Zone of Interest” by the late Martin Amis, a fictionali­zed account set at Auschwitz that the filmmaker would ultimately re-research for years and jettison most of, including its central love triangle. But even before then, Glazer had been thinking about making a Holocaust movie — always, he knew, from the point of view of the perpetrato­rs,

not the victims.

Glazer allows the idea that what drew him to make “The Zone of Interest” was a sense of responsibi­lity to address his memories of antisemiti­sm. “I hadn’t thought of it in those terms,” he says, “but yes, I would think there probably is a part of me that felt the need to point my abilities, whatever they may be, at that subject to see whether or not I could contribute to it. That’s a human responsibi­lity, I think, before it’s a tribal one.”

Three years of research into Amis’ own sources led him to the real-life camp commandant Rudolf Höss, whose every mention in Auschwitz’s records was excavated by Glazer’s researcher­s. There was also Piotr Setkiewicz’s essential 2014 study “The Private Lives of the SS in Auschwitz” and its volumes of testimony, much of it by teenage Polish girls who worked in the Höss home and on the grounds.

“I became really struck by that,” Glazer says. “The horror was in the house. Fascism starts in the family anyway, so there was something about the ordinarine­ss and the familiarit­y of that ordinarine­ss. It was just utterly captivatin­g.”

What Glazer discovered at bedrock were not the lip-curling monsters of Hollywood’s Holocaust movies but social climbers looking to improve their status. “What they had hoped for themselves and their petty bourgeois dreams — they’re not that different from ours at all,” he says. It wasn’t sympathy he was arriving at, so much as clarity.

The filmmaker’s research took him through the gates of hell themselves, where he remembers making a shattering realizatio­n. There was a single camera roll of film in the Auschwitz archive, likely taken by Höss himself, of parties and children.

“And this is a happy family in a back garden getting on with their lives,” he says of the shots. “There’s no evidence in this roll of film that the camp wall was in fact the garden wall. He didn’t shoot it. So that tells you a lot.”

Moments like these, by Glazer’s own admission, drove him close to abandoning “Zone” as detrimenta­l to his mental health. “It’s just too much darkness, too much weight, too much responsibi­lity,” he recalls. “And you begin to question your motives and it’s a (expletive) place to find yourself. And I remember my wife said to me,

‘But your job is to turn that camera around and shoot that wall that they didn’t shoot. That’s exactly what you’re doing there.’ ”

He also remembers standing on the camp side of the wall opposite where the Höss structure still stands. “You would have heard kids splashing in the pool,” Glazer says. “It’s the compartmen­talization made manifest. I knew that wall was the center of the entire project.”

Shoulderin­g the weight of the situation without recourse to sentiment became the hardest trial of Glazer’s career. He ended up shooting his film on location in an adjacent house on Auschwitz’s perimeter, the camp’s towers in view. Cameras and microphone­s would be concealed from the cast so as to approach the most unflinchin­g reality possible.

“I didn’t want to get caught up in the screen psychology of an actor,” Glazer says. “I felt like I needed to somehow film this as if I was filming the real people. I needed to believe that they were the people they were portraying before I could have anybody else believe.”

Those are tall asks of any actor. Sandra Hüller required, by Glazer’s estimation, a year of persuasion before committing to the part of Höss’ wife, Hedwig. “I think she was made more comfortabl­e by my doubts rather than my certaintie­s,” the director says. “But I knew I absolutely had to have her for that role.”

Whatever Hüller was wrestling over, it was surely as difficult as what was asked of Christian Friedel, chosen to play Höss himself.

“I didn’t want Christian to pretend to vomit

— I wanted him to vomit and he couldn’t,” Glazer recalls, smiling sheepishly at the hard ask he made during the filming of one of “Zone’s” most nightmaris­h scenes. (The Kubrick comparison­s are not unmerited.) Ultimately, actor and director studied a notorious scene in Joshua Oppenheime­r’s 2012 documentar­y “The Act of Killing,” in which an Indonesian mass murderer vomits almost in mutiny with his own mind. “There’s always a way around,” Glazer says, leaving the technical specifics a mystery.

Since last May’s Cannes Film Festival, where “The Zone of Interest” won the Grand Prix, Glazer has relaxed somewhat, though he admits to being surprised — and moved — by the rapturous reaction he received. Strangers approached him, shaken, not even with questions but simply wanting to be heard.

“There was something cathartic about it that they wanted to share,” he recalls. “And it was at that moment — just people in the street, young and old — when it really hit me that I just thought, Oh, my goodness, there might be something going on here that’s outside of the film.”

Glazer pauses, a wave of humility bringing back the questions that preoccupie­d him a decade ago. “Am I doing this because I want to make a Holocaust movie?” he asks. “Why am I here? What am I doing this for? Why me? Just who do I think I am to take this on? I have those doubts all the time. I lose huge amounts of sleep over this — I still do.”

 ?? ANDREAS RENTZ/GETTY 2023 ?? Jonathan Glazer is the director of“The Zone of Interest.”
ANDREAS RENTZ/GETTY 2023 Jonathan Glazer is the director of“The Zone of Interest.”

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