Jagerstatter’s stance comes at a price beyond his own life
though. His wife, Fani, and their young
children are harassed and shunned in their town of St. Radegund. Their neighbors pick fights, steal their crops,
spit on them and give them dirty ass looks.
The villagers think Franz isn’t being loyal to his country or rising to
the call of duty.
The story eventually splits off into two with one thread
following Franz’s stay in prison and the other showing Fani’s life at home
without her beloved husband. Both have
it hard but Franz definitely has it worse.
He’s humiliated, beaten and tortured by the Nazi guards. Meanwhile Fani has to continue to live in a
town that hates her and her kids’ guts.
She also makes days long journeys to different cities pleading for her
husband’s life to indifferent bureaucrats.
Many questions are raised such as is it right to stand up
for what you believe in even if it means certain death? Is it ok to go along with the program for a
while purely to try to survive? Is it
wrong to knowingly leave your family behind for your beliefs?
These are hard fucking questions man and yea, the movie is really
sad. It’s almost nothing but tragedy after
tragedy and Jagerstatter is unshakable in his position. Like his lawyer keeps waving a piece of paper
in front of him which would get him out of prison and into the hospital as an orderly
but Franz refuses to sign. I mean it’s
no guarantee he would live to see the end of the war or that the Nazi’s would honor
the thing but it’s a glimmer of hope that he never gives a microsecond of
thought to. That’s a helluva strong
will.
And of course the cinematography is absolutely stunning with
magnificent landscapes and sweeping camera movements to swim in. Malick does a few different tricks here as
well including going to a POV shot a couple of times and inserting real WWII
footage. Other than that it’s the usual
insane editing that only makes sense to a small number of people in this world. And while I’m not one of ‘em it’s still so
cool to see every so often.
August Diehl (Allied) and Valerie Pachner as Franz
and Fani do a wonderful job. They have
good chemistry when they share screen time making the turmoil that tears their lives
apart impactful. Diehl always has a
confident but worrisome expression like he knows what he’s doing is right but the
road is going to be extremely painful. Pachner’s
performance is equally impressive because Fani is apoplectic over the situation
but has to keep her shit together so she can take care of her children and
continue to advocate for Franz’s release.
I recommend this one.
Beside the natural grimness that a WWII movie exudes it gives you plenty
to think about. The film pays homage to
those who kept their moral compass in the darkest of days. We usually hear about the heroes on the
battlefields who undeniably deserve our gratitude, but there’s also those who
fight evil in their own way by refusing to participate in sadistic bullshit.
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