The Morning Call

Hüller plays dangerous person in honest way

Cunning intelligen­ce, rigorous intensity as actor showcased in film

- By Jake Coyle

Since Justine Triet’s “Anatomy of a Fall” premiered at the Cannes Film Festival where it won the Palme d’Or, Sandra Hüller has been dogged by a question: Did she do it?

In “Anatomy of a Fall,” Hüller plays a well-known novelist, also named Sandra, whose husband (Samuel Theis) is found dead outside their chalet in the French Alps after plunging from a top-floor window. Did he fall, or was he pushed?

There are no witnesses except, possibly, a border collie named Snoop. The couple’s 11-year-old son is blind. Authoritie­s charge Sandra with murder. When the trial commences, “Anatomy of a Fall” twists a legal procedural into a thorny marital drama, putting the couple’s tumultuous relationsh­ip — all the fights, resentment­s and affairs — on the stand.

It is a staggering showcase for the German actor Hüller’s cunning intelligen­ce and rigorous intensity as a performer. Is Sandra’s frank testimony convincing because she’s innocent or is it that Hüller is just that good?

“I answered the questions that were posed to her in the most honest way that was possible, but I don’t know the complete truth,” Hüller said in a recent interview. “I decided to believe her. I decided to play her as someone who’s telling the truth, even if it’s just that she believes she’s telling the truth. At the same time, I wanted her to be someone whom I could think capable of doing such a thing.”

“She should be a dangerous person, in a way,” Hüller added. “Not dangerous in a way of threatenin­g people but dangerous in the way of: You don’t mess around with her.”

“Anatomy of a Fall,” which Neon recently released in theaters, has been widely hailed as one of the finest films of the year. But by an even wider margin, no film this year has left more moviegoers turning to each other afterward to ask: “So, what do you think?”

Triet, who wrote the film with her husband Arthur Harari (“It’s OK, he’s alive,” she chipperly notes), wanted to use the convention­s of a courtroom drama — with its expert witnesses and cross-examinatio­ns — to dig into the subjective nature of relationsh­ips.

“For many years, I was tormented by the ways in which relationsh­ips I had been in, whether with men or in friendship­s, could be so deformed in time by the telling of them,” Triet says. “And this indignatio­n of: ‘No, it was real.’ ”

“In some ways, maybe that’s why I make films at all, so that we create an object that, once it’s made, doesn’t move anymore,” she adds.

“Anatomy of a Fall” is getting a major awards push from Neon in multiple categories, including best picture, though not in the one category it was expected to be favored. While Palme d’Or winners are typically chosen as a country’s best internatio­nal film submission, France picked Tran Anh Hung’s also celebrated “The Taste of Things.”

In discussing the snub for “Anatomy of a Fall,” already a hit in French cinemas, some noted the fiery speech Triet gave when accepting the Palme d’Or in Cannes. Triet spoke out against what she called government repression of pension reform protests in France and “the commodific­ation of culture” under President Emmanuel Macron.

“I don’t know exactly what happened,” said

Triet, who became the third female filmmaker to win the Palme. “But I don’t want to be the bad loser. I think now it’s OK for Tran Anh Hung. Of course, at the beginning, we were disappoint­ed, but now it’s OK. We’re staying in the race.”

That’s especially true in the case of Hüller, the 45-year-old who, after an internatio­nal breakthrou­gh in Maren Ade’s 2016 comedy “Toni Erdmann,” has emerged as one of Europe’s top actors. She also stars this fall in Jonathan Glazer’s acclaimed Holocaust drama “The Zone of Interest,” which A24 will release in theaters in December, as Hedwig Höss, wife of the Nazi commandant Rudolf Höss.

But if the spotlight is getting brighter on Hüller, it was clear on her recent trip to the New York Film Festival, with family in tow, that she has only so much interest in it. Hüller was most comfortabl­e praising her fellow actors or talking about weekend plans with her children. When Hüller wraps a film, she’s typically content to let the character go.

“At one point, it’s really enough,” she says, smiling. “I really enjoy the lower energy of life that normally goes on around me.”

Hüller’s entry into a role is just as organic. For her, even the phrase “getting into character” feels too clinical for a process she describes as instinctiv­e and subconscio­us.

“Whenever I connect with an idea or a person or a story — and that’s something I can’t control — my perception of the world changes a little bit,” says Hüller. “I tend to see things I didn’t before that are connected to the person or the story. It’s kind of a psychologi­cal but dangerous thing.”

In the case of “Anatomy of a Fall,” Hüller knew immediatel­y after reading the script that she wanted to play Sandra. Triet, whose 2019 film “Sibyl” co-starred Hüller, had written it with her in mind. But Triet refused to tell her whether the character had committed murder or not.

“I decided precisely in my head. But it’s a secret,” says Triet. “For me, the most important thing to say is: ‘You need to play it like an innocent.’ It was important for me that the movie would bring a spectator to think: ‘She might have killed him. She might have pushed him to suicide. She might be responsibl­e without having actually killed him.’ ”

Triet has said she’ll share her version of the story in 10 years. But whatever the answer, “Anatomy of a Fall” is about accepting and living with doubt. The couple’s son is ultimately forced to decide about his mother for himself.

“You have to decide,” says Triet. “You have to have a position before knowing something in full.”

While Hüller felt deep affection, even a protective­ness for Sandra, her relationsh­ip with Hedwig in “The Zone of Interest” was radically different. Hüller had never wanted to play a Nazi, but she was coaxed into doing it for Glazer’s film, a formalist portrait of a family living alongside Auschwitz, seemingly unperturbe­d by the horror Rudolf oversees next door.

“The more I knew about her — which wasn’t very much — the less respect I had for her,” says Hüller. “I decided not to give her any empathy or any of my normal pool of feelings.

Just to go on without it, to try to show somebody who’s just doing her thing and doesn’t care.”

 ?? TAYLOR JEWELL/INVISION ?? German actor Sandra Hüller, seen Oct. 6, stars as a novelist whose husband is found dead outside their chalet in “Anatomy of a Fall.”
TAYLOR JEWELL/INVISION German actor Sandra Hüller, seen Oct. 6, stars as a novelist whose husband is found dead outside their chalet in “Anatomy of a Fall.”

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