Current:Home > ScamsChilling 'Zone of Interest' imagines life next door to a death camp -NextFrontier Finance
Chilling 'Zone of Interest' imagines life next door to a death camp
View
Date:2025-04-14 00:20:35
The Zone of Interest begins on a lovely afternoon somewhere in the Polish countryside. A husband and wife are enjoying a picnic on the banks of a river with their five children; they eat lunch and then splash around in the sunshine. It all looks so peaceful, so inviting. But something seems strangely amiss once the family returns home.
They live in a beautiful villa with an enormous garden, a greenhouse and a small swimming pool. But before long, odd details intrude into the frame, like the long concrete wall, edged with barbed wire, and the ominous-looking buildings behind it. And almost every scene is underscored by a low, unceasing metallic drone, which sometimes mixes with the sounds of human screams, dog barks and gunshots.
It's 1943, and this family lives next door to Auschwitz. The husband, played by a chillingly calm Christian Friedel, is the camp commandant Rudolf Höss, who's remembered now as the man who made Auschwitz the single most efficient killing machine during the Holocaust.
But director Jonathan Glazer never brings us inside the camp or depicts any of the atrocities we're used to seeing in movies about the subject. Instead, he grounds his story in the quotidian rhythms of the Hösses' life, observing them over several months as they go about their routine while a massive machinery of death grinds away next door.
In the mornings, Rudolf rides a horse from his yard up to the gates of Auschwitz — the world's shortest, ghastliest commute. His wife, Hedwig, played by Sandra Hüller (from Anatomy of a Fall), might sip coffee with her friends. At one point, she slips into her bedroom to try on a fur coat; it takes a beat to realize that the coat was taken from a Jewish woman on her way to the gas chambers.
We see their children go off to school or play in the garden, and some of their more violent roughhousing suggests they know what's going on around them. At night, the fiery smoke from the crematorium chimneys sends a hazy orange light into the bedroom windows; this is a movie that makes you wonder, quite literally, how these people managed to sleep at night.
Glazer and his cinematographer, Łukasz Żal, shot the movie on location near the camp, in a meticulous replica of the Hösses' real house. They used tiny cameras that were so well hidden the actors couldn't see them; as a result, much of what we see has the eerie quality of surveillance footage, observing the characters from an almost clinical remove.
In its icy precision, Glazer's movie reminded me of the Austrian director Michael Haneke, whose films, like Caché and The White Ribbon, are often about the violence simmering beneath well-maintained domestic surfaces. It also plays like a companion-piece to Glazer's brilliant 2013 sci-fi thriller, Under the Skin, which was also, in its way, about the total absence of empathy.
Mostly, though, The Zone of Interest brings to mind Hannah Arendt's famous line about "the banality of evil," which she coined while writing about Adolf Eichmann, one of Höss' Third Reich associates. In one plot turn drawn from real life, Rudolf is eventually transferred to a new post in Germany; Hedwig is furious and insists on staying at Auschwitz with the children, claiming, "This is the life we've always dreamed of" — a line that chills you to the bone. In these moments, the movie plays like a very, very dark comedy about marriage and striving: Look at what this couple is willing to do, the movie says, in their desire for the good life.
Here I should note that The Zone of Interest was loosely adapted from a 2014 novel by the late Martin Amis, which featured multiple subplots and characters, including a Jewish prisoner inside the camp. But Glazer has pared nearly all this away, to extraordinarily powerful effect. He's clearly thought a lot about the ethics of Holocaust representation, and he has no interest in staging or re-creating what we've already seen countless times before. What he leaves us with is a void, a sense of the terrible nothingness that the banality of evil has left behind.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- Jay Kanter, veteran Hollywood producer and Marlon Brando agent, dies at 97: Reports
- Up First briefing: Fed could hike rates; Threads under pressure; get healthy with NEAT
- Chris Eubanks finds newfound fame after Wimbledon run. Can he stay hot ahead of US Open?
- 'Shame on us': Broncos coach Sean Payton rips NFL for gambling policy after latest ban
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- How does acupuncture work? Understand why so many people swear by it.
- Anchorage mayor wants to give homeless people a one-way ticket to warm climates before Alaska winter
- An alliance of Indian opposition parties — called INDIA — joins forces to take on Modi
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Risk of fatal heart attack may double in extreme heat with air pollution, study finds
Ranking
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- CFPB fines Bank of America. What that means for you.
- This Mississippi dog is a TikTok star and he can drive a lawnmower, fish and play golf
- Bowe Bergdahl's conviction vacated by federal judge
- Golf's No. 1 Nelly Korda looking to regain her form – and her spot on the Olympic podium
- A man tried to sail from California to Mexico. He was rescued, but abandoned boat drifted to Hawaii
- Greece remains on 'high alert' for wildfires as heat wave continues
- Where the 2024 Republican presidential candidates stand on China
Recommendation
Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
Iran gives ‘detailed answers’ to UN inspectors over 2 sites where manmade uranium particles found
Celtics' Jaylen Brown agrees to richest deal in NBA history: 5-year, $304M extension
After 40 years, a teenage victim of the Midwest's 'interstate' serial killer is identified
Plunge Into These Olympic Artistic Swimmers’ Hair and Makeup Secrets
Pamela Blair, 'All My Children' and 'A Chorus Line' actress, dies at 73
10,000 red drum to be stocked in Calcasieu Lake estuary as part of pilot program
WATCH: Sea lions charge at tourists on San Diego beach