(originally published in The Outreach Connection in April 2005)
As you get older you place more trust
(perhaps of course misguided) in your own instinct as a key to all things, and
in that vein the question of why the German people capitulated to Adolf Hitler seems
less mysterious to me recently than it used to be. These parallels may strike
readers as grievously overstated, but observe how a large portion of Americans
are demonstrably willing to overlook any number of Iraqi-related atrocities on
the basis of a broad statement of overall national purpose. Likewise, I found
the Terri Schiavo case extremely depressing – both on the basis of the thing
itself and given the vast media attention devoted to it – as an index of how
easily political, legislative and societal interest can be displaced into an
issue of (I’d argue) exceptionally marginal relevance. To put it glibly, the
public interest in maintaining the (at best) incremental consciousness of that
one woman seems laughably minor set against the horrendous fiscal,
environmental and other challenges facing our planet’s four billion people, yet
the dynamics of a single anomalous (but easily sloganized) case study sweep all
else away. Of course, this merely illustrates the same point as celebrity
trials or Janet Jackson’s exposed breasts or one-off gruesome murders or much
else. Extrapolate that back sixty or seventy years, to a Germany still smarting
from the effects of World War One, with less media transparency and less
evolved attitudes in a host of areas, and factor in Hitler’s initial success as
an economic revitalist, and I think it’s at least intuitively possible to sense
how even good people might have turned the other cheek.
Blind Spot
Downfall is a new German film about Hitler – the object of great debate in
its home country; it was nominated for an Oscar for best foreign film (I
observe that it’s already in the Internet Movie Database’s list of the top 250
movies). It’s attracted some negative commentary for whitewashing Hitler, and I
think it’s at least possible to see where this comes from. In the film’s first
scene, interviewing young women for a secretarial position in 1942, he’s kindly
and avuncular; he forgives the young Traudl Junge when she screws up the
secretarial test and allows her another chance. She gets the job, and
immediately after this the movie switches to its main setting, the Hitler of
the final days, as the allies close in on Berlin and he’s closeted in the
bunker with his key generals and support staff, planning a series of
increasingly desperate and impractical counter-assaults, gradually realizing
the hopelessness of his position. In the last years of her life, the real Junge
sat for interviews that were recorded in the recent film Blind Spot, and much of what’s depicted in Downfall comes from her recollections, although the film isn’t
explicitly subjective.
At the very end of the film, in a clip from
Blind Spot, Junge reflects that her
youth was no justification for her ignorance about Hitler – “it would have been
possible to have found things out.” The film doesn’t seem to be particularly
about this though. Hitler doesn’t mention the Jews, for example, until
relatively late in the film, and the film doesn’t show anything of the
genocide. In one intriguing moment, he dictates a passage denouncing
international Jewry and she looks quickly at him as if questioning whether he
really means to say that. But for the most part, the film presents a Hitler
capable of resenting anyone, including the German people as a whole. “If my own
people fail this test,” he says as Berlin threatens to collapse, “I will not
shed one tear for them.”
Das Experiment
Bruno Ganz is effective as Hitler but I
don’t know if there’s anything new to be excavated there (in an interview, Ganz
said: “Having played him, I cannot claim to understand Hitler…ultimately, I
could not get to the heart of Hitler because there was none.”) In a way, the
portrayal of Eva Braun is more quietly horrifying. Apparently caught in extreme
denial, she initiates dances and soirees within the bunker and adamantly
refuses to leave; she never expresses a single political thought and yet
accedes to his plans for marriage and then suicide without any apparent
reservation. Braun seems to have an autonomous spirit and yet she sublimates
herself entirely to Hitler. We can only guess at the roots of this – if known
at all, they lie back before what the film depicts – but it illustrates how you
better perceive Hitler’s power by looking at others than at the man himself.
The portrayal of Goebbels’ wife, agonized at the thought of her children
growing up in a world without National Socialism, is even more striking.
Director Oliver Hirschbiegel’s previous
film was Das Experiment, about an
experiment involving the division of male volunteers into prisoners and guards in
a fake prison, where things spiral out of control and become flamboyantly
violent. That film ramped up so quickly, and was so obviously designed for
visceral impact that it didn’t carry much of a sociological payoff, despite its
effective steely look and superbly maintained pace. At the time I wondered to
what extent it should be viewed as a specifically German concoction (the word
“Nazi” is only spoken once by a prisoner, and in return he gets a whack that
ultimately kills him); I concluded that although its German origins gave it a
certain specific resonance, the film basically could have been made anywhere.
A Different Film
Downfall, obviously, has an equally bleak look about it. The film is
aesthetically fairly restrained; near the end, I registered a cut from gasoline
being poured on Hitler’s and Braun’s dead bodies to a drink being poured into a
glass by Junge, and this stood out in the film’s context as being almost
flashy. It takes on a bleak comic undertone as discipline collapses within the
bunker, with soldiers sitting around getting drunk and, eventually, people
shooting themselves dead at every turn. After Hitler dies, the film continues
for another half hour or so, but none of this material seemed particularly
necessary to me.
In the end, the film is always interesting,
but seems to me to serve no particular specific function that hasn’t been
addressed elsewhere. But maybe I’m taking too much for granted here. I grew up
in the UK in the late 60’s and 70’s, when depictions of World War Two were as
endemic in the culture as reality shows are in our present one. At the end, Downfall summarizes what happened to the
various individuals portrayed, and only one of them is still alive. So the
direct threads of memory are becoming thin, and we know about the revival of
extreme nationalism across Europe. As I said at the start, I think it’s sadly
easy to sense something of how a brute like Hitler succeeds. But I think the lesson
is in how the brute is created, not in how he destroys himself. Ultimately, I
suppose I’d rather have seen a different film.
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