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The Reader


Directed by: Stephen Daldry
Starring: Ralph Fiennes
Genre:
Drama
Run Time: 124
min.
Release Date:
January 2009
On The Web:
Official
Site
Teaser:
Movie Trailer
Reviewed by
Byron Merritt |
Maybe it’s just me, but I’m sort of surprised that the Jewish
community hasn’t gotten a tad up-in-arms over this film. I mean, it
really sets a seriously sympathetic tone for a death-camp guard with
unfortunate circumstances. I realize she wasn’t well educated and had to
make tough decisions in order to survive, but so did many people who
came out of the holocaust ...Germans among them. But usually NOT
death-camp personnel who were the overseers of those who went into gas
chambers.
Still, this film is well-acted thanks to the amazing performance of
Kate Winslet (THE
HOLIDAY) as Hannah Schmitz, the guard in question.
Although I won’t take anything away from the other actors in this film,
particularly young David Kross as Michael Berg, the boy turning into a
man with the help of Hannah’s sexual appeal, I will say that, without
Winslet, this film likely would’ve fallen flat, theatrically.
Set across generations of Germans and Germany, the story is loaded
with historical interest surrounding the holocaust courts that were set
up after WWII. Hannah, not surprisingly, is a keystone for the courts as
they uncover what they think is her sole involvement in the ordering of
the deaths of Jewish women in one of the camps. Circling back to her
time at the camps as a guard, it is quickly surmised (by the movie
watcher and Michael, but not the courts) that Hannah has never learned
to read, so has those she’s about to condemn read to her.
The condemnation is set up in a way that allows Hannah to remember
those she’s let loose into the gas chambers; a sort of penance for what
she is "forced" to do. In a similar manner, she condemns young Michael
to a life of lovelessness in that he can never forget her, his first
true love. And when Michael goes to school to become a lawyer, he and
his classmates are soon brought into the case involving Hannah, but only
as spectators. But for Michael, much more is apparent. He has the chance
to save Hannah from the courts but is forced into a moral conundrum: Is
she worth saving? Is she deserving?
The story continues as we watch Hannah’s prison years pass by. With
her age comes knowledge and words. Michael sends her packages containing
books on tape that he recorded for her, emboldening Hannah to learn to
read on her own. Which she does. But is it too late for personal
forgiveness and redemption?
The ending hits pretty hard at these core issues. Personal
responsibility. Moral condemnation. Rule of law. Historical atrocity.
All of these are intertwined to form a patina of the past that blurs the
future.
The film is watchable mainly for the purposes of Kate Winslet. Her
performance is absolutely stellar. But the pacing and mixed moral
message were tough to swallow for me. I’m not Jewish, but I believe that
the holocaust happened. And I believe those associated with it, in any
way, do not deserve our sympathies. Even those supposedly "forced" into
these kinds of situations. Where’s the morality in that?
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Image from The Reader

DVD cost: $20.61
Purchase:
Tower.com (Blu-Ray)
Film Review Stew
Favorite? No.
Stew Poo-Poo? No.
Newsworthy:
The concentration camp
scenes were filmed at the Majdanek concentration camp, located in
Lublin, Poland. This camp was functional at the time of its liberation
by the Soviets in 1944, meaning that it is intact today.
Movie Quote: "I
have a piece of information, concerning one of the defendants. Something
they are not admitting."
Other Actors/Actresses
from The Reader
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