‘There are ghosts with us’: The Zone of Interest stars on the making of a radical Holocaust film
There’s never been a film quite like The Zone of Interest. Set in a Nazi commandant’s family home just meters outside of the borders of Auschwitz, the Oscar-nominated arthouse drama is a Holocaust film that refuses to depict the Holocaust. Christian Friedel plays Rudolf Hoss, a real-life Nazi commander on the rise, while Sandra Huller plays his wife Hedwig, a woman building a queasily idyllic home on the outskirts of the concentration camp. “They call me the Queen of Auschwitz,” she boasts while overlooking her verdant garden.
“I
had offers to portray Nazis before,” recalls Friedel, speaking to me over Zoom
alongside his co-lead. “And I always said ‘no’ – because often, it seems to be
more of a cliché. But Jonathan invited us to create our own interpretation of
these characters. He wrote a phenomenal script, and invited us to figure it out
based on these real photographs, these real people… he invited us to find the
truth.”
The
Jonathan mentioned is Jonathan Glazer, the visionary British director behind
Under the Skin, Birth, and Sexy Beast. The Zone of Interest is only his fourth
feature in three decades, and constitutes a radical stylistic departure: the
film is minimalist, austere, and entirely in German. If there’s something
unusual about a Brit directing a German-language Holocaust film, few are
questioning the results – least of all the film’s stars.
“I
don’t think so much about Jonathan as an Englishman,” says Huller, who first
came to the attention of many English-speaking audiences with a leading role in
the 2016 comedy Toni Erdmann. “We share a deep, deep disgust towards the people
[in the film]. I don’t know if one day a German director will make a film about
the Holocaust like this – that makes us feel like we have never spoken this
language before. But he made this film because he’s Jonathan. It’s his craft,
and he has a really close team around him, and there was a deep understanding
between all the people involved in this.”
“I
don’t think the core of the story we are telling is specifically German,”
Friedel agrees. “I think it needs an artist like Jonathan Glazer, maybe. He’s
using the German past to tell a universal thing for all of us.” Friedel in fact
describes The Zone of Interest as a “worldwide” movie. “There’s American
money," he says. "A Polish team. German actors. British crewmembers.
Jonathan said art is a universal language – I think that’s true.”
The
Zone of Interest is based on a 2014 novel by Martin Amis, which tells the story
of a Nazi officer’s love affair with his superior’s wife. Glazer’s script
strips the novel for parts, doing away with the main storyline and focusing
instead on the setting. A towering study of the banality of evil, this is a
film where the horror and the meaning lie offscreen. It was filmed in a
re-designed derelict home outside the actual camp wall, near the original Höss
family residence. Glazer used a setup of 10 cameras embedded around the house,
allowing the actors to improvise freely (an approach he has described as “Big
Brother in the Nazi house”).
The
subject matter made for an emotionally taxing shoot, with Friedel revealing
that he had a panic attack while on set. “But it didn’t matter if it was hard
or not,” says Hüller. “I think we both felt when you’re there in this place,
and the camp wall was literally 100m from the set… you have to put it into
perspective. Nobody here brought any ego; nobody would want to ‘win’. It was
really a completely personal struggle with this topic – for Jonathan and each
of us, too.”
Throughout
the largely plotless story, we see the Höss family enjoy the spoils of
genocide. Hedwig and her fellow Nazi wives divvy up the possessions of Jews who
had been sent to Auschwitz. Jewish victims are seen only as they enter the Höss
property to labor. It is through the background noise alone that we are
afforded a sense of the atrocities: screams, gunshots, and other sickening
noises are near-constant, and ring out unacknowledged by the characters on
screen. It refuses to offer any sense of resolution or justice – as in real
life, there is none.
We
sometimes asked ourselves what kind of world this would be now, if this hadn’t
happened. The start still makes me so, so sad.
Sandra
Hüller
In
making The Zone of Interest, Glazer eschewed any sort of artificial period
aesthetic, giving the audience nothing to thrill or tease them. “We attempted
to make it a modern film, not a historic one,” Hüller says. The film still
nonetheless has a striking eye for images, laden with terrible implications. At
one point, Rudolph is seen smoking a cigar in his back garden. In the distance,
we see another plume of smoke – this one rising from the camp’s smokestacks.
The
attention lavished on The Zone of Interest over the course of awards season has
been something of a surprise. While films about the Holocaust have frequently
been major awards players – from Schindler’s List to The Pianist to JoJo Rabbit
– none have been as starkly arthouse, as fiercely uncommercial, as this. And
yet the film has been nominated for five Oscars, including Best Picture and
Best Director. (Hüller is also nominated for Best Actress, but that’s for her
role in another film, the powerful courtroom drama Anatomy of a Fall.)
For
Hüller and Friedel, the glitz of the red carpet conveyor belt has been jarring,
given the film’s sober subject matter. “Frankly, I do find it strange to be
part of the [awards] machinery… it’s a strange thing to talk about in this
glamorous surrounding,” says Hüller. “But on the other hand, it’s necessary to
speak about it as much as possible. Of course that’s tiring, and there are all
sorts of feelings involved, including anger. But it’s not been spoken about
often enough.”
Despite
the specificity of its 1943 setting, The Zone of Interest is a timely and
urgent work – a film about ignorance, Hüller says. “The whole world was – and
is – affected by fascism,” she adds. “That’s something that changed everything.
We sometimes asked ourselves what kind of world this would be now if this
hadn’t happened. The start still makes me so, so sad. I can’t even tell you…
what it triggers inside of me even talking now… the realization of what this behavior
was, the choices that these people made.”
The
Zone of Interest may not be the defining piece of art about the Holocaust, but
it is one of the most potent. It’s a film that interrogates the very purpose of
Holocaust fiction, asking us what’s being left out of the picture, and why. “It
was intense,” says Friedel. “Every day we went to work, we felt the
responsibility.
“There’s
something that Sandra sometimes said, very beautifully – ‘There are ghosts with
us from the past.’ We felt this past, and never forgot what we were doing
there.”
‘The
Zone of Interest’ is in cinemas now
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