Inside Haunting Holocaust Drama Son of Saul: What Can We Change in Hell? - 27reservation

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Inside Haunting Holocaust Drama Son of Saul: What Can We Change in Hell?


Dont mention the H-word around the makers of Son of Saul. The Cannes Grand Pix-winning Holocaust drama may play like a horror movie, with its immersive, first-person POV journey into the tortured soul of a man forced to assist in the extermination of his own people. But director Lszl Nemes and actor Gza Rhrig visibly recoil at the suggestion of fright-fest genre-playeven as they acknowledge their films forbidding aspects.

People, even survivors, told me they were scared of seeing this film, Nemes says, seated alongside his star. But then when they watched it, they thanked me.

Son of Saul certainly doesnt fit comfortably into any category, not even the Holocaust film subgenre. Sallow-faced Saul (Rhrig) is enslaved in the death camps as a sonderkommando, conscripted to lead fellow Jews to extermination and then clean their corpses from the chamber. Amid the routines of atrocity, he impulsively decides to give a slain child a proper Jewish burial logic and plausibility be damned. Nemes presents this waking nightmare via the cinematic equivalence of tunnel vision, keeping the character in tight close-up while most action happens at the periphery, off screen, or out of focus in the background. Imagine the worlds grimmest first-person video game.

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Both director and actor say that they never sought to exploit the audiences fears, and even avoided (quite literally) putting horrific imagery front and center on screen. Were never increasing the shock value for its own sake, Rhrig says. Were always preferring restraint to excess. The restraint extends to the information being supplied, as theres no backstory of who Saul is or how he got here. Hes just a man in hell, and were thrust directly into the cauldron with him.

Their approach has been bothhighly praised andharshly criticized in both respects thanks to its take-notice formal conceit, which, depending on the audience, either expresses or exploits the victims experience. But even its detractors use words like masterful and virtuosity to describe the effects of the movies unusual perspective. We didnt want to limit the scope of inhumanity that took place there by trying to shoot it frontally, Nemes explains. In a sense, [that] would make it understandable. Whereas by making a portrait, and making the information very fragmented, we opened the mental perspective of inhumanity.

All told, its quite a dare for a first-time filmmaker to take. The 38 year-old Nemes was born in Budapest, grew up in Paris, studied film in New York, and apprenticed under Hungarian director Bela Tarr. I had the feeling while making the film that it would be a failure, Nemes confides.

All along? Rhrig asks, surprised.

Nemes nods and continues: I found that I could not control the material the way I wanted to control it. We wanted to communicate the frenzy of the concentration camp, the lack of information, but what could the entire experience be? We had this feeling that we were constantly on the edge of the abyss.

Rhrig says he didnt share his directors anxieties, though he was suspicious when first approached about the film. This was an exploited subject matter, done well very few times, he says. But the script lured him back to screen acting decades after his last appearance (a Hungarian miniseries from 1989). His hiatus was at least partly a function of spending the last 15 years in the U.S., where his strong accent forestalled opportunities. Nevertheless he says was undaunted by the challenges of playing Saul.

I hope it doesnt sound arrogant, but I really felt that I could do it, he says. Generally in life, when you speak to me or I speak to you, I make sure that my face kind of supports what Im saying. But the way I had to play imagine a harp. I couldnt put my fingers on the strings. But lets say a little breeze comes through the window. And then the strings resonate. It was less me trying to do something than something being done to me.

Throughout Son of Saul, its what you dont see thats the toughest to accommodate. What can we change in hell? he asks, challenging the idea that a standard narratives or approach can apply to a situation such as this. The fact that the main character is trying to save a dead body is already in a different realm. If we were trying to save a kid, it would have been an entirely different movie. Thats the paradigm of the Holocaust film that this kind of hope can exist. Whereas we say this kind of hope doesnt exist. But is there some kind of other thing, some other humanity that still transcends all religions or traditions? Is there a possibility for story in the concentration camp at all?

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