Let’s say you have an astounding, soul-etching affair with someone you admire—a lot. You have nothing bad to say about him or her, except that suddenly, without warning, that person is gone.
Now let’s say that, years later, you find out that this person has allegedly done horrible—really horrible—things to other people. Does it un-etch this person from your soul? Change the good things you remember about the affair?
Who is the “real” person? The one you knew? Or the one to whom these other deeds have been ascribed? Can humanity and evil co-exist in the same person? What does it say about you if you feel compassion for someone who has committed an atrocity?
These questions (and more) are at the heart of The Reader, which tells the story of Michael, a 15-year-old innocent who accidentally encounters Hanna, a thirty-something trolley-worker with a healthy libido and no problem with younger men.
(SPOILER ALERT: I found it hard to talk about this movie, beyond this graph, without giving away some details….if you want to go in blind, don’t read further. If you like knowing the details….read on…)
Through Michael, we see Hanna as a gruff, tender, and sometimes bossy and dictatorial lover. Their most intimate moments are when Michael reads to her. That’s because the key to Hanna’s soul is the beauty of words and music. The affair comes to an end—leaving Michael heartbroken.
Fast forward seven or eight years to the mid-sixties. Michael is now a law student, and like many of his generation, he’s trying to make sense of his country’s behavior during the Holocaust. He’s attending a Holocaust trial for a class taught by a camp survivor. And there, lo and behold, is Hanna—on trial. It seems she was a guard in one of the camps, and that one of her jobs was to select ten women, periodically, for execution. Testimony reveals that she tended to single out the ones she’d made pets of—those who read to her.
One of the key moments in this movie is a speech given by one of Michael’s fellow students, which indicts all the older generation of Germans. He says they all knew what was happening to Germany’s Jews, even if they didn’t actively take part, and that they are all guilty.
What interests me is the notion that individual Germans behaved the way they did for different reasons. And that even people with a discernible soul were capable of it.
The temptation is to say that the people who were capable of atrocities were just evil. That let’s a lot of us who don’t perceive ourselves as evil off the hook—we’d never do that. And perhaps it makes the world feel safer—how many Hitler-like monsters can there be? It divides the world into us and them, which is the way we tend to like it. It makes a neat kind of sense.
This story doesn’t buy that explanation. Evil behavior and, tenderness can live side-by-side. It’s a much harder truth to live with. We watch Michael struggle with that—pitying Hanna, repulsed by her, wanting her to pay for her crimes, embarrassed by his pity and the enduring mark his first lover has left on him.
I don’t think, as some have said, that this take makes light of the guilt of those who participated, one way or another. I think it just makes it harder to separate ourselves from them. At the Holocaust museum in Washington, D.C. , there used to be (may still be—it's been awhile) an exhibit celebrating non-Jews who put their lives on the line to help Jews escape. My reaction: God, I hope I would have been one of them. But would I? It’s kind of a chilling question.
10 comments:
Hey - I haven't had time here in the hospital to read your whole posting yet. But I had wanted to write in on this one, anyway.
I think there are big problems with this movie. Mostly, it is that Kate Winslet's character, though it makes a sort of general, wide-angle sense to me, doesn't make sense in its particulars. If she feels no remorse for her actions, then why is she so quiveringly upset? What is it about her that would make her start and carry on an affair with, really, a boy? And so forth. To me, she feels more like a device for the author to ask questions than a person.
Which also means that, for me, the soft-porn first third of the movie feels kind of manipulative - something racy to suck you in. This despite the fact that I very much enjoyed the soft porn. Kate Winslet's frankness and generosity as an actress is something I just feel thankful for - that is the word. Also - if there is a more beautiful creature on the earth, I don't know who or what it is.
But all this means that, for me, the moral of the film ends up being "If you treat someone whom you have seen something really human in with great ungenerosity, it will haunt you for the rest of your life." In other words, it is a movie about a guy who was an asshole at a critical moment and paid dearly for it.
If he Michael had made it known that she was not literate, it would not have absolved her - it would, on the contrary, have help more seriously convict her collaborators. But it would have been an act of human generosity - and I don't see what can be said against that. If you find anything human in another person, that, to me, is a ray of hope, and what must be held onto. Because - hand me the worm-can opener - I just can't understand the argument that says that Nazis were somehow "badder" than anyone else in history.
In the recent riots in Kenya, people were burned alive in a church. In Africa 100 years ago, vain Belgians too stupid to get a job back home oversaw the extermination of 10 million people. And Stalin, and Bokassa, and Srebrenica, and, and, and....
I was an actor for years, and one of the most interesting (to me) parts of being an actor is that you have to - it is your job - find something common between you and, you know, someone who kills a man on a trumped up charge so he can sleep with his sister. Etc. I don't know which is the chicken, which the egg, but I came to or away from that experience with a deep sense that the truth - and, really, our only hope - is no human being is completely alien to me. In fact, it is incredibly dangerous to start assuming anyone is - because, at that point, you have nothing binding you to that other person. And that is when the killing can begin.
So I can't really understand the interest in the question "Was Hanna 100% bad?" "Did Hanna deserve any compassion?" Etc. To me the answers are obvious. It is through compassion that we rescue community. This has nothing to do with punishment - as a wonderful truth-and-reconciliation lawyer said during a panel I once went to, Pope John Paul II forgave his would be assassin - but he didn't ask for him to be let out of prison! Of course certain things are unacceptable - and we make clear our unacceptance through the legal process. But once we start saying, That person is worse than I could ever be - well, we should get ready to be surprised.
I think (and I think Roger Cohen hints at this in his recent NY Review article on Gaza) that the insistance on the uniqueness of the Holocaust has started to be historically damaging. If it is uniquely bad - well, then, I guess we don't have to worry about US ever doing anything like that! And (extra-big worm-can opener, please) maybe it means that the Government of Israel doesn't have to ask itself if, maybe, surrounding a sizeable town with a fence with only one access point which the Army opens and closes at will (Qalqilya) doesn't maybe have kind of a not-too-pleasant similarity to certain atrocities of 70 years ago or so.... Not incidentally, this reminds me of the, to me, histrionic reaction of the US Government to 9/11. I'm sorry, but it WASN'T some sort of unique outrage. And arrogating to ourselves the right to say it is has allowed us to go off and kill tens to hundreds of thousands of perfectly innocent people.
So - I guess I thought the movie was just, in the end, not a very good script. The acting/actors almost save it - that Ralf Fiennes and Lena Olin could make that absurd second-to-last scene (Just thought I'd drop in and cry about your tormentor - oh, and here's her tin; I'm sure you'll want to put it right on the shelf beside the picture of your dead relatives!) actually kind of moving is a tribute to them, not the script. But, hey - maybe it is a good movie. I've written all this! And the images - mostly of Kate and the boy, in the pre-"fallen" part of the movie - do linger. (Though one might ask if sweet lingering images of this kind have anything to do with what the movie is supposed to be about - !)
Reading your comments, Elizabeth, I feel like maybe I got caught up in responding to what I'd HEARD about the movie rather than to the movie itself. Maybe the point it wants to make is precisely that, if we fail to treat each other with compassion out of a need/desire to separate "us" from "them," we all lose. Mightn't Hanna have come to UNDERSTAND her evil if he had just talked to her? Rather than, at the end, her just despairing, without necessarily (it seems) much understanding even then? The scene in the prison when she is due to get out, where Michael scolds her and refuses to be tender, is so painful and infuriating. You cut yourself off, everyone loses. (The message, by the way, in pretty much all of Shakespeare, as far as I can tell.)
i don't know, i'm still digesting your FIRST comments...
i do think there's a lot of playing judge and jury here...the court scene is really a formality, there's so much judging and sentencing of one kind or another going on in other dimensions here. and that is def. where we get in trouble as as society, isn't it?
it seems like michael had the chance to not repeat that us/them scenario that led to all the trouble, that he judged her for taking part in it, and by not acknowledging her humanity, by helping her with a simple fact, which would actually not have exonerated her fully, he repeated the crime...showing that perhaps he was as susceptible as hanna, et al, in his own way...
the fallout of this failure to make this connection, his internal disconnection, i think, was symbolized by failed relationships with everyone...
somewhere, recently, i was reading--or watching the bonus stuff that came with a dvd--a film maker talking about the first shot of a movie, how that's your chance to lay it ALL out...so i've been focusing a lot on first shots...first shot in this movie is a pretty dismal morning after...so the question for me became...okay, why can't this guy connect with anybody--or himself?
maybe that last scene with his daughter was about letting it go..returning to the scene of the crime (not really, but the church where we saw hanna at her most human) to stop judging and containing the story in a certain way, and just tell it and let it be what it was...and by allowing all the contradictions in, regaining himself?
and re: the scene with olin...maybe that's what that was about, the contrast between allowing the separation between us and them to drop, in contrast with olin, who was pretty emphatic about saying, nope, not happening.
i agree with you that there are probably flaws and weaknesses in this script...i'm often not critical enough. and i don't come at it from an acting background. what happens to me is that, when there's a preponderence of good things, and actors of the magnitude of winslet and fiennes and olin (i adore her)....i can overlook a lot.
oh and re: the holocaust...i was kind of thinking that, though i don't think this move de-values the import of the holocaust, i don't necessarily think it had to be the holocaust, that was the catalyst for it all...it reminded me of nabokov and lolita...didn't he try to think of the worst thing a protagonist could do, when he was concocting that story? holocaust has become a bit...handy...when it comes to filling in ideas like that. it's certianly not the only choice, though (sadly)
i don't feel prepared, yet to say how good or not this movie is...but it's interesting that, two weeks later, i am still thinking about it, trying to sort it out. that's usually the mark of something at least semi-successful
somewhere in this blog, i stole a quote from quentin tarantino, that a good movie makes you want to go out and have pie afterward and talk about it...i think this one definitely measured up to that standard...i shouldn't have said that...now i want pie!
More Pie!
Re: Olin saying "nope" - I remeber very prominently in one of Primo Levi's books that he talks about some Germans (can't remember if it was someone who ran one of the labs he was forced to work in, or rather some bystanding "good Germans") writing him in the sixties or seventies, clearly looking for forgiveness, and how clear he was that he wasn't offering any. I don't know if he would have been willing to had they actually undertaken something that demonstrated CONSCIOUSNESS, or if the whole thing was just too big to ever entertain forgiveness no matter what. But, anyway - I am sure the feelings of a survivor would be very different than those of someone sitting at his computer in 2009.
I like your reflections on the overall disconnectedness in his life, and how that was of a piece with his refusal to help. The person I went with was up in arms that Hanna had, in a way, essentially molested this boy - that she had screwed up his emotional life forever. But then, so did he, by his choices. I guess that's how it usually is - one of the best essays I ever remember reading was by Rydzard Kapucinski (or however you spell it!), about how being Poles trying to defend themselves against the Nazis had actually made them worse people - i.e., that one of the horrible things about loosing violence on the world is that it makes EVERYONE worse - even the people experiencing it. I think that is unbelievably profound and true.
Okay - maybe it IS a good movie!!! As you say, all this thought. I just think it is not a movie about the things most reviewers seem to think it is about....
pie, pie, pie.
on another front, i realized that i never looked into any of what the director had to say about the movie, after i saw it...here's a quick quote i just found:
"This is not a Holocaust movie, it is a movie about the second generation and how you come to terms with and how you can approach living in a society and loving in a society that has been involved in genocide," Daldry said.
Going to see what else I can find...
btw, interesting re: primo levi. i can't even imagine. makes me want to read him...also interesting point re: violence begets more of the same...
re: the molestation thought...you know, i don't have any rational basis for saying this, and i'm not working with any definitions in mind, but...it just didn't feel to me like he was molested. i'm totally willing to be yelled at on that point, it was just my gut reaction. and i didn't think it was the sex, so much as being wounded by the abrupt break up and all the other things we've discussed, that led to his life of disconnects.
i've been sitting here trying to replay that first scene in my head--the absolute first seconds i think are a shot of a coffee cup, disembodied hands pouring coffee. which, if that's the right memory, i also like. pieces rather than a whole.
i'm sort of tempted to see it again. i do like the fact that this director makes you work a bit...he didn't hand us much on a platter, did he? that's the kind of thing that actually does tend to get me feeling pissy about movies...being able to construct the rest of the movie in my head when it's only halfway through.
Yes, but that was her point - he was so emotionally vulnerable at that age that he couldn't just roll with the punches like an adult could. I'm not sure I agree with her - but she did make me realize that the fact that I originally didn't even think of this angle simply because he was a boy, not a girl, doesn't necessarily make sense.
true. i was thinking the same--that if he'd been a girl, kate winslet a guy, i would have been horrified. that he was a boy made it seem less bad...though, as the mother of a little boy, i'd be HORRIFIED if henry was seduced by an older woman at the tender age of 15. i think the point, within the movie, for me, was that hanna was kind of a taker...got her needs met, whether they be getting read to or carnal, one way or another. the eerie thing that i keep thinking of is how she tended to pick on weak people in the prisons to read to her, and then send them to their death...and he was sick when she first met him, and one of the first things she said to him when he came back was "have you always been weak?"
Hmmm - I just took that line as them setting her up from the start as MEANBADNAZIWOMAN - but I see what you mean; it does fit in. Though into a pattern I'm not sure I undertand. There is a long tradition, of course, of being cruel to the weak or marginalized (Trinculo of Caliban, when he has gotten drunk on the newcomer's fire water and is prostrating himself before them: "I could find it in my heart to beat him." (Trust Shakespeare, BTW, to just drop a line in like that that echoes out and out and out)). But, whatever she may be in the movie, I don't feel like she's portrayed as actively cruel - banally evil, yes, but not someone who would pull legs off of bugs. So what is her thing with weak people. Don't know.
The problem I had with this movie was that I never really felt empathetic toward Kate Winslet's character, even before it became clear that she had participated in some horrible atrocities. It seemed somewhat bizarre and off-the-mark to me in that, somehow, her sense of shame over her inability to read eclipsed her sense of shame for the role she played as an SS prison guard. However, I felt the scene with the grown Jewish author was quite poignant in the observation that "no lessons could be learned from the camps." That is, to try to make sense of people in the context of the extreme inhumanity of the deaths camps will is something of a wasted effort. It just doesn't make sense. Anyway, I would say it was a worthwhile movie - just not as good as I was expecting.
Mike in Austin
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