The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Waititi’s ‘Jojo Rabbit’ finds a mixed response in Toronto

- By Jake Coyle

TORONTO >> It’s just a few hours before “Jojo Rabbit” will make its world premiere at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival, and writer-director Taika Waititi is still figuring out how to talk about it.

“I’m still learning, really, how to describe it,” Waititi says.

It’s no easy task. But, then again, it was even harder when Waititi was pitching “Jojo Rabbit” to film executives. “You don’t walk into a studio and say: ‘Nazi comedy!’” he says.

“Jojo Rabbit” is as singular as its director, the New Zealand filmmaker of absurdist comedies (“What We Do in the Shadows,” “The Hunt for the Wilderpeop­le”) who’s coming off helming the 2017 Marvel smash “Thor: Ragnarok.” It’s a coming-of-age story about a 10-year-old boy named Jojo (Roman Griffin Davis) who lives with his mom (Scarlett Johansson) and has an imaginary friend he talks to for company and guidance.

Oh, and also “Jojo Rabbit” is set in Nazi Germany and that imaginary friend is Adolf Hitler.

But that summary doesn’t really do the job either. Hitler, as played with bug-eyed flair by Waititi, is really the young, uncertain boy’s confused, half-formed idea of Hitler, the man he’s been indoctrina­ted to idolize. The movie starts off a madcap comedy and gradually morphs into something sweetly sentimenta­l, as Jojo begins questionin­g what he’s been told about Jews after discoverin­g one (Thomasin McKenzie) living in his attic.

“Jojo Rabbit” is about growing up in a world where the received wisdom is ridiculous.

“It’s vital that we keep retelling these stories and doing them in inventive and interestin­g ways,” said Waititi, alluding to more straightfo­rwardly serious films about WWII Germany. “If that involves adding humor and absurdity, then so be it. It’s still communicat­ing the same ideas.”

Whether Waititi managed to pull it off was of considerab­le debate once his film did hit audiences Sunday night in Toronto. “Jojo Rabbit” was hailed as a masterpiec­e, Waititi’s eccentric opus and a worthy heir to Charlie Chaplin’s “The Dictator” by some, while others deemed it a badly misjudged misfire that awkwardly melds humor with atrocity no better than Roberto Benigni’s schmaltzy “Life Is Beautiful” did two decades before it.

Entertainm­ent Weekly called it “an audacious piece of Third Reich whimsy that almost definitely shouldn’t work as well as it does.” Variety called it “‘Life Is Beautiful’ made with attitude.’”

“Jojo Rabbit,” which Fox Searchligh­t will release Oct. 18, had come into Toronto one of the festival’s biggest question marks. It might leave that way, too.

Last month, Variety reported that some Disney executives were concerned about “Jojo Rabbit” being too edgy for the company, which earlier this year took control of Fox Searchligh­t as part of its larger acquisitio­n of 20th Century Fox. One executive reportedly worried that the film would “alienate Disney fans.”

But Waititi said he doesn’t believe that report. He has his own history with Disney. Waititi’s “Thor” movie was a Disney release and made $848 million worldwide. He’s set to direct its 2021 sequel.

“About a month before that article, Iger and Horn had seen the film and they have been very compliment­ary. They gushed over it,” said Waititi, referring to Disney chief executive Bob Iger and chief creative officer Alan Horn. “They’ve continued to send me supportive notes about the film.”

Waititi also challenged the idea that an independen­t film like “Jojo Rabbit” could ever be worthy of such consternat­ion.

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