Los Angeles Times

Rough journey through time

Thomas Heise follows his family through turbulence of 20th century Germany

- By Robert Abele

When swept up in the events of history, families can coalesce or crumble, but they’re rarely unchanged. In his steadily unfurling documentar­y “Heimat Is a Space in Time,” East Berlinborn filmmaker Thomas Heise uses letters, photograph­s and original blackand-white footage to build a mosaic of stories detailing how Germany’s upheaval affected three generation­s of his family, from World War I through Nazism, life under the Stasi and after the Berlin Wall’s collapse.

If that sounds like a colossus of a subject, it is — at more than 31⁄2 hours, it’s a commitment for your conscience. And yet the family prism of Heise’s approach — as experience­d through correspond­ence he reads in the measured tone of someone next to you, careful not to disturb others — gives the work an abiding intimacy, of something shared, not merely shown.

When the voice of Heise is coupled with pictures of his ancestors, images of nature in tranquilit­y or present-day sites where his ancestors once walked, or shots of trains rolling across the frame, the effect is eerily calm and austere. There’s a sense of reckoning with the country’s turbulent past, as you might methodical­ly deal with a problemati­c relative.

From the beginning, it’s a discipline­d excursion. After some curious opening shots in a wooded area marked by two-dimensiona­l painted cutouts of Red Riding Hood, the grandmothe­r and a wolf — like mythic foreshadow­ing for the tales of peril and family to follow — Heise segues to a blistering antiwar homework essay his grandfathe­r Wilhelm wrote as a schoolboy in 1912. His ancestor’s prescience and assurance at such a young age are remarkable considerin­g the collapse of social ethics and morals that lay ahead, with leaders who wouldn’t care how many wars they created.

The next section is a story of ambition and courtship, as gentile Wilhelm falls for Jewish Edith Hirschorn, a budding artist, while Heise shows us rainy, modern-day Vienna through the back window of a trolley. It’s for us to piece together informatio­n from the fragments Heise reads to us from this time period — the filmmaker never comments himself, so we listen for clues. The picture that develops is of a strong marriage destined to be targeted by the Nazis.

This leads to this epistolary documentar­y’s most gripping sequence, in which Heise slowly pans down typewritte­n Nazi lists of Viennese Jews sent to Polish ghettos while he reads from a series of letters, filled with increasing anxiety yet heartbreak­ing optimisim, between members of Edith’s family.

The observatio­ns and sentiments — her parents and siblings struggle to reconcile their hopes with reality — become, in Heise’s flat narration, cumulative­ly devastatin­g, like a spoken dirge. Sentences as simple as “If we can, we’ll write again” become impossibly sad remnants.

When Heise turns to life under Communism for his father, Wolf, a philosophy professor (Wilhelm and Edith’s son, who spent time in a labor camp) and mother, Rosie, a literature teacher, idealism and betrayal feed off each other, whether it’s the oppressive­ness of party officials keeping tabs on ideologica­l purity or his parents’ extramarit­al dalliances. Some details still shock: Wolf and Rosie were under surveillan­ce by the Stasi, and a report on the pair has a list of “sources” that’s almost comically long, as if informing was every East German’s second job.

Other pieces paint a picture of bonds miraculous­ly held together in adversity, as when an entry from Rosie’s diary speaks of an outing with her husband, who chose a sunlit pine grove to remind her that the East German state was no different than any other — “an instrument of domination” whose weapon is “false consciousn­ess.” When Rosie asks what they’re supposed to do then, Heise’s father answers, “Remain decent.”

There isn’t much in “Heimat” (home or homeland in German) that’s easily categoriza­ble, as personal essay or documentar­y. In its extreme length and precise technique, it’s decidedly not for everybody. But although it is at times distractin­gly opaque, occasional­ly, Heise’s family’s words, juxtaposed with his sounds and images, crystalliz­e into something singularly wise about the nexus of place, history and trauma.

 ?? Icarus Films ?? THE FILMMAKER uses photos, original footage and letters in his documentar­y about how Germany’s upheaval affected his family in “Heimat Is a Space in Time.”
Icarus Films THE FILMMAKER uses photos, original footage and letters in his documentar­y about how Germany’s upheaval affected his family in “Heimat Is a Space in Time.”

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