The Prague Post - 'Bone-chilling' Auschwitz drama is early Cannes favourite

EUR -
AED 4.262562
AFN 73.710324
ALL 95.813323
AMD 438.049481
ANG 2.077291
AOA 1064.335865
ARS 1624.353348
AUD 1.630432
AWG 2.089209
AZN 1.977798
BAM 1.951994
BBD 2.339599
BDT 142.286248
BGN 1.912376
BHD 0.438157
BIF 3264.389777
BMD 1.160672
BND 1.477258
BOB 8.026661
BRL 5.99406
BSD 1.161665
BTN 106.655637
BWP 15.523268
BYN 3.411736
BYR 22749.169649
BZD 2.336255
CAD 1.576651
CDF 2524.461792
CHF 0.903989
CLF 0.026138
CLP 1032.058263
CNY 7.981995
CNH 7.982404
COP 4307.044577
CRC 548.544625
CUC 1.160672
CUP 30.757806
CVE 110.437941
CZK 24.396985
DJF 206.275086
DKK 7.471385
DOP 70.394758
DZD 152.665271
EGP 60.343639
ERN 17.410079
ETB 181.703183
FJD 2.554929
FKP 0.866462
GBP 0.865106
GEL 3.157283
GGP 0.866462
GHS 12.593421
GIP 0.866462
GMD 84.729203
GNF 10187.804558
GTQ 8.906864
GYD 243.035552
HKD 9.08083
HNL 30.838734
HRK 7.531828
HTG 152.317604
HUF 387.53795
IDR 19567.767914
ILS 3.572072
IMP 0.866462
INR 106.96677
IQD 1520.480216
IRR 1534060.078108
ISK 145.698959
JEP 0.866462
JMD 182.26462
JOD 0.822923
JPY 183.571294
KES 150.016162
KGS 101.500731
KHR 4660.097832
KMF 490.964169
KPW 1044.638932
KRW 1710.712543
KWD 0.356478
KYD 0.968046
KZT 566.048756
LAK 24867.395511
LBP 103938.170162
LKR 361.079079
LRD 212.693156
LSL 19.00035
LTL 3.427162
LVL 0.702078
LYD 7.385932
MAD 10.834852
MDL 19.991709
MGA 4840.001658
MKD 61.624926
MMK 2437.339802
MNT 4162.494025
MOP 9.360248
MRU 46.577391
MUR 53.333105
MVR 17.94369
MWK 2015.506454
MXN 20.430785
MYR 4.554485
MZN 74.169853
NAD 19.000234
NGN 1621.45863
NIO 42.620475
NOK 11.187241
NPR 170.638349
NZD 1.959516
OMR 0.446245
PAB 1.16169
PEN 3.985164
PGK 4.99611
PHP 68.566694
PKR 324.2829
PLN 4.266497
PYG 7562.960512
QAR 4.225967
RON 5.088157
RSD 117.361357
RUB 91.754332
RWF 1692.839997
SAR 4.356256
SBD 9.345336
SCR 15.529346
SDG 697.564004
SEK 10.649676
SGD 1.478098
SHP 0.870805
SLE 28.520332
SLL 24338.70909
SOS 663.319362
SRD 43.570458
STD 24023.565374
STN 24.452954
SVC 10.164182
SYP 128.320243
SZL 19.000064
THB 36.707467
TJS 11.116708
TMT 4.073958
TND 3.367687
TOP 2.79462
TRY 51.180295
TTD 7.881937
TWD 36.899041
TZS 3013.104344
UAH 50.968161
UGX 4303.719842
USD 1.160672
UYU 46.849057
UZS 14125.377551
VES 505.700804
VND 30450.227843
VUV 139.041208
WST 3.173863
XAF 654.697392
XAG 0.013172
XAU 0.000224
XCD 3.136774
XCG 2.093472
XDR 0.814833
XOF 653.457782
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.904908
ZAR 18.898455
ZMK 10447.44135
ZMW 22.535933
ZWL 373.735885
  • CMSD

    -0.0800

    23.08

    -0.35%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    23.25

    +0.13%

  • BCE

    0.5100

    26.39

    +1.93%

  • BCC

    -1.9500

    72.54

    -2.69%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    12.64

    +0.47%

  • NGG

    -0.5600

    89.85

    -0.62%

  • GSK

    -0.1900

    55.32

    -0.34%

  • BTI

    1.0800

    59.41

    +1.82%

  • RIO

    1.3300

    91.68

    +1.45%

  • AZN

    0.0400

    194.99

    +0.02%

  • RYCEF

    0.7800

    17.68

    +4.41%

  • RELX

    -0.4900

    35.19

    -1.39%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    14.46

    -0.14%

  • BP

    -0.7100

    39.94

    -1.78%

'Bone-chilling' Auschwitz drama is early Cannes favourite
'Bone-chilling' Auschwitz drama is early Cannes favourite

'Bone-chilling' Auschwitz drama is early Cannes favourite

A powerful Auschwitz-set psychological horror film, "The Zone of Interest", is emerging as the hot ticket at the Cannes Film Festival, with reviews on Saturday near-unanimous in their praise.

Text size:

British director Jonathan Glazer's film focuses on the family of Rudolf Hoess, the longest-serving commandant of the Auschwitz camp, who lived a stone's throw from the incinerators.

While the screams and gunshots are audible from their beautiful garden, the family carries on as though nothing was amiss.

The horror "is just bearing down on every pixel of every shot, in sound and how we interpret that sound... It affects everything but them," Glazer told AFP.

"Everything had to be very carefully calibrated to feel that it was always there, this ever-present, monstrous machinery," he said.

The 58-year-old Glazer, who is Jewish, focused on the banality of daily lives around the death camp, viewing Hoess's family not as obvious monsters but as terrifyingly ordinary.

"The things that drive these people are familiar. Nice house, nice garden, healthy kids," he said.

"How like them are we? How terrifying it would be to acknowledge? What is it that we're so frightened of understanding?"

"Would it be possible to sleep? Could you sleep? What happens if you close the curtains and you wear earplugs, could you do that?"

The film is all the more uncomfortable as it is shot in a realist style, with natural lighting and none of the frills that are typical of a period drama.

It has garnered gushing praise so far from critics at the French Riviera festival.

A "bone-chilling Holocaust drama like no other", The Hollywood Reporter said of the "audacious film", concluding that Glazer "is incapable of making a movie that's anything less than bracingly original".

Variety said that Glazer had "delivered the first instant sensation of the festival", describing it as "profound, meditative and immersive, a movie that holds human darkness up to the light and examines it as if under a microscope."

- 'I cogitate a lot' -

Glazer is known for taking his time -- it has been a decade since his last film, the acclaimed, deeply strange sci-fi "Under the Skin" starring Scarlett Johansson.

He made his name with music videos for Radiohead, Blur and Massive Attack in the 1990s before moving into films with "Sexy Beast" (2000) and "Birth" (2004).

"I cogitate a lot. I think a lot about what I'm going to make, good or bad," he said.

"This particular subject obviously is a vast, profound topic and deeply sensitive for many reasons and I couldn't just approach it casually."

A novel of the same title by Martin Amis was one catalyst for bringing him to this project.

It provided "a key that unlocked some space for me... the enormous discomfort of being in the room with the perpetrator".

He spent two years reading other books and accounts on the subject before beginning to map out the film with collaborators.

Glazer's film is one of 21 in competition for the Palme d'Or, the top prize at Cannes, which runs until May 27.

French reviewers were equally impressed, with Le Figaro calling it "a chilling film with dizzying impact" and Liberation saying it could well take home the Palme.

X.Vanek--TPP