Showing posts with label Holocaust Films. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Holocaust Films. Show all posts

Wednesday, 23 November 2011

YOU DO NOT KILL KIDS IN FILMS

"Ken, if I had killed a little kid, accidentally or otherwise, I wouldn't have thought twice. I'd killed myself on the fucking spot. On the fucking spot. I would've stuck the gun in me mouth. On the fucking spot!"
- Harry, In Bruges

         I don't actually remember when it was exactly that I discovered this about myself, but I cannot watch films in which children die. And if I do, I tend to like them less for the same reason. Now In Bruges isn't really an exception to the rule as the characters feel the same way as I do.

              I guess it must have started when I was a little kid myself and I expected all kids movies to be like Home Alone and Baby's Day Out, in which the child is the father of the man in the sense that he kicks ass of the big bad guys. I cannot recall exactly which film it was that first affected me so; possibly a Bollywood film called Mr. India (who is the only Indian superhero in my opinion) where the death of a girl causes our hero to fight for the good. It was inconceivable that someone so young can be gone just like that. It frightened me then, it frightens me now. Also, things like Child's Play which freaked out the kid in me.

           Right now, I was catching up to what I thought was my long-overdue viewing of the Holocaust movie The Boy in the Striped Pajamas. For those who know me, I quite like Holocaust movies, but for me it is all about the hope that survives. *SPOILERS* So can you imagine having had watched this film almost till the end, only to be told by my friend that the children die?!!!! I mean, how can this be? I literally just sat throughout the film calling darling little Asa Butterfield my imaginary adopted child, and this! I am devastated. Why would they kill the children? In Sophie's Choice, it is all in the past tense, and we never really meet the children. But Asa Butterfield, with his big blue eyes and that way he says "Shmuel"? Ruined, traumatised, forever.


Do you have any strong feelings like this? Will I ever recover? Must see Hugo ASAP!

Friday, 9 September 2011

Holocaust Horrors- Schindler's List VS The Pianist

       More than a year back I had thought about starting a series of posts comparing two or more films which have some similarities between them. I only did post the first one, about the beauty of Marie Antoinette vs A Single Man (if I had the option now, I would include Atonement and Tree of Life in this also). I am thinking about reviving it...but it will be very erratic, most probably. Anyways, this comparison was in my original list of comparisons; I do so love my Holocaust films and these two are the best that I have seen so far.

        It is a fact that the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, or more commonly known as the Oscars, are partial to World War II films. These films range from stories of the soldiers sent to war, epic and doomed romances, the dilemmas of the authorities at that time, and the Holocaust. The Holocaust was easily one of the worst events to have ever occurred in human history; the worst if you ask me. I can never understand how people can be so full of hatred for other people, who are not of the same race and religion as them. It's not so much the killing and the torture that terrifies me, but this unfathomable and extreme hatred. The two films- Schindler's List and The Pianist showcase two different viewpoints, or maybe even three, of the horror of this dark and damned period.


Okay basic facts about the two:

             Schindler's List is about a German businessman, Oskar Schindler, who saves the lives of many Polish Jews in the Kraków Ghetto by giving them jobs in his enamelware factory. He first starts out doing so as he thinks it is cheap labour, but his Jewish accountant Itzhak Stern uses this as an excuse to employ needy Jews on Schindler's behalf. As Schindler begins to see how it is saving their lives, he begins to change and become a more compassionate man. This change in him is triggered even more with the arrival of the SS Lieutenant Amon Göth, who is as ruthless and cold a Nazi as probably Hitler was. As he sees the atrocities being committed to poor innocent Jews around him, he becomes determined to save as many as he can, even forgoing all of his monetary and worldly objects. It was directed by the masterful Steven Spielberg and is a clear indicator that while he is a big alien geek, the man can make incredible dramatic movies with the same expertise as the ground-breaking sci-fi ones.

             The Pianist tells the story of Władysław Szpilman, a Polish Jewish pianist who has his world turn upside-down when the World War II stroke Warsaw. His story is the flipside of Schindler's story- he suffers first-hand from all the barbarism that Jews were subjected to during the Holocaust. From losing his livelihood, to his family, to having to survive on the most basest of ways; the man literally goes through hell during this period, but comes out the other side victorious. And when I say victorious, I don't mean that he particularly fought for any cause, but that he won in his fight for being allowed to live- a right that is everyone's by nature but not in this most unnatural of times. The Pianist was directed by a Holocaust-survivor himself, Roman Polanski. Now I did not know this before, but Polanski actually survived the Kraków Ghetto, and it makes sense why he refused Spielberg's offer to make Schindler's List when the idea had first come to Spielberg. Polanski lost his mother during the Holocaust when she was taken to Auschwitz, and it is so obvious that he felt more in tune with Szpilman. Surviving the war, loosing loved ones, and living with the guilt of being the one who didn't die- these themes are as apparent in the film as it probably might be in the director's life. I cannot imagine how difficult it must have been to make this film, but no one else could have done it better.


                Now my thoughts on these films. Some random, interesting things that I made notes about while watching them. Schindler's List starts in colour and then it fades into black and white. The Pianist starts in black and white and then becomes coloured. The first time we see Schindler, or a part of him, is when he is opening a bottle of alcohol. The first time we see a part of Szpilman is his hands playing the piano. The first look of their faces- Schindler looks smug and wise in a slightly vampire-y way (the way the light reflects in his eyes in the beginning); Szpilman is focused and ever-so-slightly sad. Both the protagonists however are shown to be very determined in their first scenes- Schindler to get the notice of German officials, and Szpilman to finish his piece in the piano.

           As you can see from the very beginning itself, the films could not have been more opposite from each other. There is a quote towards the end of Schindler's List, "Whoever saves one life, saves the world entire." This, to pinpoint exactly, is the basis of all the difference between the two films. While the first shows a man trying to save lives of many, the second shows a man trying to save his life from many.


            Schindler's List is a magnificent film. The whole black and white looks of it pronounces the despair at those times more. One of the most upsetting scenes in the film was during one of the health checks that the Jews had in which, in order to look healthier and save themselves, the women prick blood from their fingers and use it as rouge and lipstick. There was no colour left in the lives of the Jews...it was literally being drawn out by the savagery of the Germans. In all this Schindler becomes their hope. I love the slight changes in his character. The plight of the Jews really affects him, and though he keeps the facade of a profit-loving businessman, the end shows how involved he had become in their whole ordeal. Neeson is a born-leading man. He was effortless in being the smooth Schindler, and the subtlety in his acting for the times when he feels for the Jews is really great. His final outburst is heart-breaking. He feels guilty to be called good by people, and that is what eventually leads him to do his acts of generosity and greatness. This is ofcourse brought about by Sir Ben Kingley's character, Itzhak Stern. I have never heard praise about his character, which I think is very wrong. While Schindler is secretly good, Stern is all-out empathetic and helpful. He is the one who starts recruiting needy Jews, and he is the one who witnesses the changes in Schindler just like us. Obviously no one can talk about Schindler's List and its actors without mentioning the career-defining and simply superb performance of Ralph Fiennes as the deplorable Nazi officer Amon Göth. His role is what sets this film apart for me. I think Göth is the embodiment of why this whole movement or set of actions by the Nazis enthrall and repulse us at the same time. His scorn towards the Jews was almost compulsive, as we see in his interactions with his Jewish help Helen Hirsch. He was blood-thirsty and lustful, but at the same time an efficient officer and someone who lived and died with the conviction that his actions and believing in Hitler's crazy agenda was the right thing to do. Fiennes fills out this role. He is charming and cruel and totally mad. I sometimes like to think that there indeed was some soul in him, but that scares me even more. Like that scene when he points at the mirror and says, "I pardon you"; he is almost like a God there who thinks taking away people's lives is a right.


             The Pianist is nothing without Adrien Brody as Władysław Szpilman. This is a singularly magnificent piece of acting that Brody has done here, and it is, quite possibly, my most favourite performance by an actor ever. One cannot talk about the film without talking about him. In the beginning, Szpilman is a respectable, well brought-up gentleman from a good home. All this reflects in the way he carries himself and talks to everyone. He is even charming with the women, and a good brother and son. When the Warsaw Ghetto is made, his life starts changing in the most brutal ways. Living in a tiny home, slaving for adequate amounts of food, witnessing people die slowly around him- all looks horrible. A child dies in his hands, and from his window, he and his family watch on as Germans storm into the house of the Jewish family living opposite them and throw an old man on wheelchairs out of the balcony because he was unable to stand up to greet them. Soon he has to get work permits for his family, and he manages to do so with great difficulty. But still they are all soon deported to Treblinka- all except Szpilman who is "saved" by a family friend. There is a scene after this when he walks crying into the disheveled streets of the Ghetto because being the one who is saved from death while his family is suffering is a most bitter punishment. Then he joins a reconstructing unit in the Ghetto where he joins in an uprising by the Jews and helps them for a while. He then escapes and goes into hiding with the help of Non-Jewish friends from the entertainment field. He witnesses the Warsaw Ghetto uprising, and feels wretched once again for being the one who is "safe". When an accident threatens to reveal his hiding place, he goes to his emergency connection, who was a former flame of his, Dorota, and her husband. There is a scene here, when he sees her play the cello and we feel how sad he must feel for losing two most important things in his life- love and music, in all of this. When he goes into hiding a second time in a very German neighbourhood, his apartment has a piano in it. Here we see how that instantly relaxes him and it probably makes him feel more safe than anything else. He gets jaundice at one point, and it is distressing to see his condition there. He looks gaunt and bony, and his movements are less upright as a gentleman is supposed to have, but it is understandable because of all the time he spends completely alone. Brody is on his own throughout most of the film, and his little facial movements of sadness or concern or deafening loneliness speaks louder than any actor doing any kind of dramatic acting. When the Warsaw Uprising happens, he has to escape from his house again, and he lives off from going from house to house in an absolutely pulverised and ruined Warsaw. His movements become animal-like and we think the man he once was has completely gone in all this hardship. But finally one day, a German officer finds him and upon finding out his profession from him, asks him to play the piano is a house where Szpilman was hiding in. This is the moment of truth, and a scene that makes me weep like none other. Despite being malnourished and what I would think, brink of insanity for being isolated for so long, once the man touches the keys of that piano, he plays like the maestro he always was. This scene is so necessary because while it was important for the man in him to survive through all this, it was more important for the pianist to be there. He plays out his sorrow and frustration and everything at that time, and like us the German is awe-struck and mesmerised. I truly think that Szpilman would not have minded dying after that- it was like his salvation.


              I thought the direction of both was top-notch, but what Polanski did with The Pianist was transcendent. One must not let the past histories of the maker affect their judgement of what he has made, but I can safely say that this is a genuine exception. As I said before, I cannot imagine what he must have gone through making the film. Ebert had written about how Polanski wanted to show the effect of luck throughout this ordeal, like the kind he had had. That was there, but the guilt that came along with the luck was agonising. Despite having seen The Pianist atleast 10 times, I still get scared for Szpilman's life. This is because we know how important it is for his to survive. Stanley Kubrick had dismissed Schindler's List by saying that it is not a true picture about the Holocaust and how Spielberg showed the story of the few saved over the millions who died, but I think it is so paramount, as depicted by both the films, that inspite of all these diabolical acts, hope remained. The people surviving- whether it was the Schindler Jews or a pianist, is hope and good surviving. And the fact that both these films are based on true stories, just tugs at my heart strings you know...

I think I can write about these two films forever, but I am going to wrap it up now and decide which film I thought was better.

  • Direction- Spielberg made an honest effort and a great film, but Polanski did something extraordinary and plain inspiring by revisiting the true horrors of his past and creating an heartfelt epic about it.
  • Story- I believe The Pianist is a greater tale. It is story of survival like none other, and it is all the more amazing because it was true. And it is also the story of hundreds and thousands of others, who like Polanski, were saved but lost so many loved ones in the process.
  • Music- Well, The Pianist was about music, but I will give this one to Schindler's List as it was a touching original score, and the Jewish songs in between were beautiful.
  • Cinematography- I am partial to black and white and some of the scenes in Schindler's List are just breath-taking.
  • Art Direction- The Pianist, especially for the crumbling Warsaw.
  • Acting- Haven't I said enough? I love Fiennes as Göth and he's probably in my top 5 antagonists, but Brody as Szpilman is absolutely mind-blowing.
  • (This generally doesn't matter, but this is my post so...) Ending- Many of you won't get it, but I thought the Schindler's List ending was way too Bollywood. However The Pianist's ending was superb. It brings about a perfect circle, and Szpilman is shown as such an adept pianist, and Brody's hands are so graceful. 
So all in all, I think The Pianist wins for me simply because the story, acting and direction is more heartfelt and touching.


    Wednesday, 29 June 2011

    "Don't you see, Sophie? We're dying."

          It was Meryl Streep's birthday few days back. As clichéd as it sounds, she really is one of my most favourite actresses, if not the one. She can do all sorts of things, all sorts of roles- from a distraught mother to a devilish fashionista, Holocaust-survivor to iconic chef, and now she'd gonna be the Iron Lady. And whatever she does, she is just so good. But I, myself, had not understood her true greatness till I finally saw Sophie's Choice. I had anyways been in my Holocaust mood since I finished The Book Thief (oh what a book!) and so I sat down on 22nd June, 2011- Meryl Streep's 62nd birthday, and watched what is often said to be one of the greatest cinematic performances ever.



             The film is set right after World War 2, when a Southerner named Stingo decides to venture out to Brooklyn, New York, in hopes to find inspiration and solitude to write his novel. He rents a room in a great big and rather odd-looking rose-colored house. The first day in, he's invited by the tenants living on the floor above his- Nathan and Sophie, for dinner. Except the first meeting does not go as planned, when he sees a hysterical Nathan screaming at the sobbing Sophie, and when Stingo tries to cut in, he and his Southern accent gets mocked too. After sometime, Sophie comes to give Stingo his promised dinner. When he goes to return it, he sees a distraught Sophie sleeping on a chair. Then he hears Nathan quietly creeping back up, and he and Sophie reconcile...he whispers to he “Don’t you see Sophie, we're dying." Nathan and Sophie decide to befriend the very inexperienced Stingo, and Stingo finds out that Sophie was a Polish immigrant who had been rescued from dying painfully by many a deadly disease by Nathan, who is apparently a brilliant biologist, and his doctor brother. Something in him tells Stingo that he should flee from this odd couple, but he remains and they all become the best of friends.

             One evening, after a failed date, when Stingo returns, he finds Sophie all worried about Nathan, who is hasn’t returned from work and it’s very late. She calls him to have a drink, and while they’re talking, she reveals to him that she was married once. She says that her professor father was completely anti-Nazis and this had resulted in him and her husband, who was her father’s assistant to be taken away by the Germans and get executed. Also her mother had died from tuberculosis and for trying to save her by bringing in some smuggled ham, Sophie had been caught by the German soldiers and sent to the Auschwitz concentration camps. She also tells Stingo on how after hearing her story, Nathan, who was Jewish, had become obsessed with the Nazis. While they are discussing this, Nathan returns, in a bit of a haggard state, much like the first night and starts to get angry at both of them, but Sophie controls him.

              Nathan steals Stingo’s novel from him one day and reads it, while Sophie takes Stingo out. He then takes them to the Brooklyn Bridge and, with champagne, declares that his friend is the next great novelist. After a few days, he tells them that the project that his team had been working on has been completed, and it is so great that he will win the Nobel Prize for it. He gets a beautiful dress and shoes for Sophie and a coat for Stingo as gifts. That night both of them get dressed up and wait for Nathan to return, so that they could all celebrate his triumph. Except when he does come, he’s in one of his “moods”. He harasses Sophie and when Stingo tries to stop him, he starts to demean his novel. When Sophie runs away the next day, Stingo goes to look for her, and meets a professor who had previously known Sophie’s father. He reveals that the man was actually a ruthless Anti-Semite. Stingo is stunned to find this out and when later Sophie returns and he confronts her with this information, she says she lied because she didn’t want to be hated and left alone.

           Later she tells him her story- about how she revered her father, and translated a speech for him in which he proposed the total extermination of Jews, but it had made many mistakes, causing her father to get disappointed in her. She revealed that she had a lover, and his sister, who was a Resistance leader, had asked her to translate some stolen Gestapo documents, but she had declined the offer to protect her children. Her lover was later killed, and she was taken to Auschwitz with her son Jan and daughter Eva. Jan was sent to the children’s camp and Eva was exterminated. Because of her qualifications, Sophie was sent to intern for the German commander Rudolf Höss. She tried to woo him with her Aryan looks so that he would send Jan to the Lebensborn programme, and he promised to get him to meet her, but he did no such thing and instead sent her back to the camps.

            Nathan returns and everything seems to go back to normal. Stingo is then called by Nathan’s brother who reveals the truth about Nathan. Nathan is not a part of any research group, or a biologist. He simply works in a pharmaceutical company, and all his brilliance and lies are because he is in fact a paranoid schizophrenic. He tells Stingo to keep an eye out for him, especially when he is on drugs which he can easily obtain. Sophie knows nothing of this. Nathan proposes to Sophie, which she accepts, but has an attack again and starts believing that Sophie and Stingo are having an affair behind his back, and threatens them with a gun over the phone. Sophie and Stingo flee and take refuge in a hotel where he asks her to come to his father’s farm with him and marry him because he loves her. It is then that Sophie reveals her biggest secret...about a choice she had once made.
              
             Now as usual I have revealed all of the story but the ending. I kind of already knew about it because of one of the four Modern Family episodes that I have ever seen, but it was still very shocking. Bloody Nazis...how were they so cruel?


              The story has three main aspects, each connected to the three chief characters. Stingo's story is that of a wide-eyed kid who comes to New York for a great adventure, and in many ways he does get one, though not exactly of the kind he had in mind. An older Stingo is the narrator of the story, so we understand that as time has passed, he has made peace with the whole experience. The younger Stingo reminded me of Michael Pitt's character in The Dreamers- someone desperate to make friends, and when he finds the friends of his dreams, he is bedazzled by them so much that he overlooks their overbearing flaws. In all the innocence of youth he falls in love with them- with Nathan because of his eccentricities and Sophie because of her beauty and then sorrows. He is the only one who knows both their secrets and he accepts them, and as he is the eyes of the audience in a way, we accept them too. His is the "coming-of-age" story.

              Sophie's story is about her previous life in Poland and in the Auschwitz concentration camps. The oppression and torture by Nazis is infamous throughout film history, and this is no exception. Schindler's List had the good German POV, The Pianist had the Polish Jew POV. Sophie's POV was of a woman- a daughter, a wife, a mother, who endures a fate worse than most. She is puzzled by, yet in awe of her father's Anti-Jew feelings. She regularly wants to do the right thing, but she keeps avoiding them to protect the people she loves, which is not exactly wrong. I am always amazed by the Nazis; I mean I get that people were sad in Germany and Hitler tried to make things better, but how is it that almost an entire nation of people are reduced to such an extreme form of hatred and cruelty? I like my villains, but they have some class, and Nazis were just...  JEGEGN(&$#@VKL*@GNVWJLB!@$%#GOFLEN%(&GFLBG
    God they infuriate me so! So Sophie's was the Holocaust story.


             Which takes me to the final story, and my favourite one- Nathan and Sophie's crazy, turbulent, sadomasochistic even, love affair. It just made so much sense to me. Ofcourse Sophie needed someone like Nathan- while he made her laugh and happy, he was also the punishment she inflicted upon herself. And obviously Nathan wanted someone like Sophie- a survivor, a sad soul, a beauty, like a fallen heroine from a story that he had read, and he could almost let his wild imagination run with her. Nathan and Sophie's love was contagious and deadly- they were a very striking couple to look at and even a more striking one to know. Stingo had to fall in love with them...who couldn't? They are the happiest pair one moment, and the very next moment Nathan is calling Sophie a disease. Lady Gaga's Bad Romance- right here people! And I am one of those who loves a story of over-consuming love, and that's just what this is.

            The story is adapted from William Styron's novel of the same name by the writer and director Alan J. Pakula. I thought it was well-written and directed. I liked the parallel storylines- Stingo's narration of his encounter with Nathan and Sophie and Sophie's tale. One of the things I really enjoyed, and I thought was quite novel, was the happier parts of the story. I had known this to be a Holocaust-related film, and I was quite surprised to find myself smiling when Nathan and Sophie dance or when they all go to Coney Island or Stingo's date with Leslie Lapidus.

                What I think really drives the film is the cast. Oh Meryl, Meryl, Meryl...how do you do such things? The first time she speaks in that Polish-accented broken English, and I have already forgotten that this is the same Meryl Streep I had seen so many times before. She is so beautiful as Sophie...she glows like how the actresses of old used to. I love the desperation with which she tries to stay happy. For instance the scene when they're all at the piano and she's telling Stingo about her mother, and she gets sad for a second and then starts laughing at her silly grief. The Polish she speaks sounds perfect I believed that she really was a native. The director shows the two periods of her life in two shades- the present in bright colours, where she is healthy and almost always with a smile, and the past in dull greys, where her she is almost catatonic because the concentration camps had wrung out every emotion from her life and she had become a like non-human. Meryl manages to excel in both these parts. Her narration is so unique...I've never heard such an accent ever, and her sadness is so apparent in her voice. And my god...the choice scene, it's so heartbreaking! Her chemistry with both Kevin Kline, who plays Nathan and Peter MacNicol, who plays Stingo, is great. Especially with the former.


            I loved Kevin Kline in this film. Nathan had to be over-the-top because of his mental illness, and he acted it all out so perfectly. From the mean-spirited screaming and ridiculing to the exclamations of love and praise, he totally won me over. And he was so handsome and Meryl was so beautiful...they looked like such a power couple except for the craziness. I knew MacNicol from Bean, and it was so surprising to see him in this role. But he too was very good- the naivety and the thirst and the wonderment of youth, he was all of these things. His relationship with Sophie was like a teenager with his first crush, and as their relationship evolves, so does he.


              So in the end I will say that if you are like me, an eternal Nazi-hater, and Holocaust-movie lover, and a messed-up relationship-admirer, and most importantly, a Meryl Streep fan, you should definitely check this film out.