Why The Zone of Interest is a Masterpiece

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 12 ก.พ. 2024
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ความคิดเห็น • 583

  • @laurenn.4121
    @laurenn.4121 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +743

    The family dog and the baby were always anxious throughout the whole film. Pacing around, whining, crying. Yes, it added to the tension in the film. But the dog and baby were the household's most innocent, impressionable characters. They sensed something wasn't "right" in the environment they were in, and expressed it freely through primitive behaviour (barking, whining, crying, etc.)

    • @itsblitz4437
      @itsblitz4437 หลายเดือนก่อน +29

      Good observation

    • @ramibecharalebfr
      @ramibecharalebfr หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      the best was the mother/grandmother really. She wanted to part of it

    • @alexandereckert5939
      @alexandereckert5939 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      yeah the dog
      sensed something wasn’t right lmao W take d00d

    • @itsblitz4437
      @itsblitz4437 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@ramibecharalebfr part of what?

    • @fideltamayo
      @fideltamayo หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      yess ! she appears in the persons the movie is dedicated to. the whole plot was filmed with a military thermal camera because in words of the director, he wanted to make her shine just as she did in real life

  • @BradsPitts.
    @BradsPitts. 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +439

    That bit with the Polish girl while Hoss is reading Hansel and Gretel… so haunting

    • @CharliesDaughter
      @CharliesDaughter 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +61

      YES!!! especially with the mention of 'being put in the oven' as part of the story; I literally gasped in the theater making that horrible connection

  • @anthonykent1706
    @anthonykent1706 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1027

    The girl placing the apples is a true story. Jonathan Glazer met the 90 year old Polish woman before she passed away. A beautiful sub-plot of humanity.

    • @CharliesDaughter
      @CharliesDaughter 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +124

      Glazer said he dedicated the movie to her, and that it's mentioned in the final credits

    • @robyncooperramsey8323
      @robyncooperramsey8323 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

      I’d love to read her story! Does anyone know if that’s available in print?

    • @raymondhodgson1190
      @raymondhodgson1190 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +35

      Now that scene where the little boy was hearing the guards of the wall complaining about how a fight broke out over an apple makes even more sense. Chilling...

    • @ecitraro
      @ecitraro 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      @@raymondhodgson1190and the boy says “Don’t do that again.” The lesson is for him.

    • @michalkaftanowicz
      @michalkaftanowicz หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      ​@@robyncooperramsey8323 Her name is Aleksandra Bystroń-Kołodziejczyk, there are links in her Wikipedia article. Majority of texts will be in Polish, but automatic translation is usually pretty accurate.

  • @tabbypurrkins9129
    @tabbypurrkins9129 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +467

    Hedwig trying on a victim's mink and lipstick was the most horrifying moment. I wonder what was in the note left for her too.

    • @alidemee8161
      @alidemee8161 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      I literally had to pause and get a drink I was so disturbed by kt

    • @akimonod
      @akimonod 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +65

      And the way she put the note in the tiled stove thing (in the summer) as if she could burn the unpleasant message away as, well...

    • @Jeff-66
      @Jeff-66 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +97

      The note was no doubt her mother expressing her disturbance at what was happening next door. The furnaces lighting up her bedroom did it for her. Hedwig casually tossing the note in the fire and going about her business was pretty horrifying too.

    • @originaozz
      @originaozz 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +78

      I don't think Hedwig felt nothing about her mother's letter. She did want the house for her mother's approval and comfort. It's the fact that her mother rejected her way of life that unnerved her & made her feel judged (rather than the deaths), so she chose to ignore it completely to justify her lfiestyle. That just speak so much truth, especially in today's world.

    • @avigindratt7608
      @avigindratt7608 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I took it as mom didn't like the 'unpleasantness' of the 'view', like she's not disgusted by the atrocity or thinks it's wrong, but because it's just unpleasant. And I bet she left for petty, superficial reasons. Remember mom was like 'you let a jew in the house>?!' and hedwig lied about it to her, calling her a 'local girl'. Mom also complains she didn't get her jewish former-boss's curtains. Absolute trash humans

  • @tshore4099
    @tshore4099 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +506

    I watched this film last night. It was phenomenal but also the most uncomfortable film I've watched in a long time. How the sound tells a different story from what we're witnessing on screen is just stunning. I will be thinking about this for a long time.

    • @timgriffin3368
      @timgriffin3368 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      It's so true. Complete and utter 2 different films: one is the Hoss family stuff seen, two is the sounds etc beyond the wall of Auschwitz, spelling.
      Same as one is my life I'm living and two is all if the atrocities I see and hear around me.
      Sound Oscar goes to....Zone of Interest!!!

    • @darwinsom957
      @darwinsom957 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      Best movie of the "year" I had to get up and vomit half way through. The Sound is best I've heard in years. Good God.

    • @catherinebreitfeller669
      @catherinebreitfeller669 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      a must see movie

    • @phanatic215
      @phanatic215 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      We watched it last night and compared it to Childish Gambino's This Is America music video. While he is doing silly dances in the foreground, there is a bunch of wild shit happening in the background.

    • @StrawberryCatdaOGboss
      @StrawberryCatdaOGboss 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      And the liminal spaces. It's just art

  • @A-Jams
    @A-Jams 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +154

    I interpreted the flash forward scene as a moment of how only after these tragedies happen is when we give them proper treatment, while during the time it happens we just focus internally.

    • @sandrahatherley2184
      @sandrahatherley2184 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      execellent point

    • @sandrahatherley2184
      @sandrahatherley2184 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      excellent (spelling correction)

    • @SuperSupermanX1999
      @SuperSupermanX1999 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      I sorta had two interpretations. The first was that the people who work there today as cleaners are almost having the same experience as people back then. They are so exposed to the sight of thousands of empty shoes that they become numb to it now and just carry on with their daily routine, barely even acknowledging it.
      The second was that, no matter how much you try and sanitise something (either by putting up a wall or by physically cleaning it), the stain of evil never comes off. Mopping the floor in the gas chamber does nothing to remove the colours on the walls that tell us what happened there.

    • @patrickhoxie9175
      @patrickhoxie9175 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Or also, that we will never fully be able to understand the true horror because we did not recognize it while it happened. Like every other historical tragedy we only see it from behind a wall. Perhaps Hoss also felt separated from i t and also recognized its brutality. Like he knew he was culpable but also powerless.

  • @hmp01
    @hmp01 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +130

    the constant brown clouds that you see is the most horrifying thing in this movie for me.

  • @jossangeles4011
    @jossangeles4011 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +147

    What stuck with me is the sound design. I can literally close my eyes in parts and listen to the reality just beyond their walls. Chilling.

  • @JosephDutra
    @JosephDutra 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +113

    The river scene is something that will truly haunt me for years to come.

    • @luckyone3818
      @luckyone3818 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      I didnt got that scene, could you describe what happened in there? Why was he pacing back to his House?

    • @Manaklyps
      @Manaklyps หลายเดือนก่อน +23

      @@luckyone3818 Höss found a piece of skull while fishing, then he sent the children into the house. And they scrubbed the children clean of the ashes in the water.

    • @MsAnya26
      @MsAnya26 29 วันที่ผ่านมา

      He took the kids to the River and he peacefully fishing etc and then you see it the brown cloud in the Water? It's Ashes like and ya the bone. Just horrific honestly. But I reckon they were scrubbing those kids because of the Zyklon B, probably thinking the kids would be poisoned like.

    • @disseminationnetwork
      @disseminationnetwork 17 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      When he was in the river fishing, a huge amount of ash comes down the river, dumped from the crematorium and they all freak out because it touches their skin and they rush back to scrub it off in the bathtub...

  • @TheAndrewj96
    @TheAndrewj96 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +187

    I just saw this movie, and there was a particular scene that really overwhelmed me.
    It’s the scene with the close-ups of the flowers, with the screaming in the background increasing in volume. Then the screen slowly fades into blood red as the sound suddenly cuts out completely. We wait there for a few seconds before those synthesized foghorns come in, letting off a couple of stomach-churning blasts… before it just smash-cuts back to the main character casually eyeing his garden.
    I swear to God I dragged my hands down my face and was on the verge of crying. I can’t even explain what it was, but what an incredibly haunting moment.

    • @rubyjones274
      @rubyjones274 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      My favourite moment as well

    • @avigindratt7608
      @avigindratt7608 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      yea i think that was the climax of the film. Loved how they did the sound and the all-encompassing red with the flower, very dramatic

    • @Iknowbetterthanyou
      @Iknowbetterthanyou 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Oh, the screen turned red, signaling violence. So innovative...

    • @manantial773
      @manantial773 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Iknowbetterthanyou You are quite dumb, it was not just a red screen.

    • @alexandereckert5939
      @alexandereckert5939 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      touch grass

  • @jeremyhopkins577
    @jeremyhopkins577 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +234

    This is the sort of film that causes me to reconsider how I throw 'masterpiece' around. They don't come around much and this is certainly one.

    • @booksandbasketball96
      @booksandbasketball96 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      They don't come around much, but at the same time there are more masterpieces out now than there have ever been! Every year I see a film from the past five to ten years and am stunned by it. But rarely, to your point, do I get to see them in the theater upon their initial release. Thankfully with this film, I was able to.

    • @molon___labe
      @molon___labe 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      I wonder if they will do a "masterpiece" on the genocide happening before our very eyes in Gaza!

    • @jeremyhopkins577
      @jeremyhopkins577 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@molon___labe Glazer and his producer have brought that up in the awards speeches so if this comment is rooted in resentment towards Jews and holocaust remembrance you're way off. If this is a serious question I assume it will take many years for enough facts and stories to become available for that film to be written.

    • @jeremyhopkins577
      @jeremyhopkins577 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@newwindserver Say what you will, at least it isn't damaging misinformation like that film. Look it up.

    • @DocOrtmeyer
      @DocOrtmeyer หลายเดือนก่อน

      absolutely!

  • @DonnaAbrams-qh7zt
    @DonnaAbrams-qh7zt 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +41

    The wife refusing to leave the house when Hoess got transferred was the moment that upset me the most. The lipstick and the mink coat was bad but the house being so important to her showcased her acceptance of the death happening in her backyard.

    • @disseminationnetwork
      @disseminationnetwork 17 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Or her total delusion into the fantasy life she's created in her mind...

    • @VonJay
      @VonJay 6 วันที่ผ่านมา

      That and she probably wanted to stay because she was cheating

  • @EdSmed20
    @EdSmed20 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +123

    god i loved how this movie presented a completely different perspective than anything i've seen before. this is real story telling, peak cinema.

  • @davidthomas-ot4cl
    @davidthomas-ot4cl 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +385

    The family represent us. Not something we might do in the future under certain extreme circumstances, but what we are all doing right now, every day of the year. We all watch the news and see starving children, wartorn countries etc but we do nothing about it. We carry on living our prosperous lives, tending to our gardens, shopping for coats and lipstick. Hedwig and Hoss are us. We don't think we are monsters and neither did they. That's the point.

    • @WorldsCollide23
      @WorldsCollide23 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Hi, I’m a History Ph.D. student specializing in the Holocaust.
      Höss participated in the orchestration of the mass murder of over one million Jews in Auschwitz by ordering the use of Zyklon B in gas chambers and overseeing the deaths of entire populations of Jews, Roma and Sinti, homosexuals, “asocials” and other “undesirables.” He did not “do nothing about it,” he did it. With all due respect, Höss is not us. Unless, of course, we are actively involved in perpetuating a genocide.

    • @harisubramanian4165
      @harisubramanian4165 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +27

      I don't think so...

    • @peteradaniel
      @peteradaniel 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +53

      I completely agree. Banality of capitalism. The Höss’ obsession with class and status as well as the material goods they acquire. They’re need to maintain comfort, to the discomfort of the prisoners. But also the close proximity to industrialised death and dehumanisation, while still completely keeping it arm’s length, literally and figuratively.

    • @yaeguuji1829
      @yaeguuji1829 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      Sadly but true

    • @EdSmed20
      @EdSmed20 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      i've always argued with my friends that learning history is useless. people say, "learn history so it doesn't repeat itself," yet history continues to repeat itself every single day. it doesn't matter if we learn history, it continues to repeat itself. doesn't matter how hard we try against it, it will repeat itself continuously. i think history is just the archetype of humanity--we will repeat and rewash history until the very end or until we evolve

  • @matthewcragg3607
    @matthewcragg3607 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +72

    Thank you for suggesting the infrared scenes are that way to create good-in-the-dark vs. evil-in-the-light inversion of the daylight scenes in the garden. I wondered why the filmmaker chose to do that. Your theory is very plausible.

  • @CHMgamemedic777
    @CHMgamemedic777 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

    The 3 minute intro of black screen and music with a confused vibe, was like a descent into another reality. This was definitely one of the clever ways to pull the audience in, especially when the plot is so thin, it feels like were taken back in time, or watching a museum play out.

  • @theuniversewithin74
    @theuniversewithin74 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +192

    Didn't take me more than 3mins to conclude this was a masterpiece. It's one of the most gut wrenching experiences I've ever seen. One of the reasons for its horror is the stunning beauty of the daily scenes. Beautiful colours and aesthetics. Just ordinary people living their lives right next to industrial horror. This film will be with me forever. And one of the most impressive aspects is that TZOI manages to erase time. Removes the distance between us and those unspeakable acts and ask us how far we really are from the Holocaust, both ethically, morally and practically. No other holocaust movie has ever asked us to our face if we're really at a safe distance or if there even is such a thing. ❤

    • @madelynbaker5013
      @madelynbaker5013 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      YES! From the minute the black screen lingered in it's long duration at the beginning...I knew we were in for something we have not really ever seen in Cinema before....Maybe the Wizard of OZ. LOL! Really you know what I'm saying! And the ending when the cleaners open the door ....I knew immediately where we were. We were not in Kansas anymore!

    • @theuniversewithin74
      @theuniversewithin74 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@madelynbaker5013 Kansas is long gone! 4.37 light years gone to be exact 🤗♥️🌱🌱🌱🌱

  • @spenserdavis788
    @spenserdavis788 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +57

    It's the small moments, like the discussion of the curtains and the woman her mom used to clean for, that have stuck with me since seeing this. I love that the Oscars recognized it.

    • @leonardo448
      @leonardo448 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      But i think she said those things because she thinks is what her daughter like to hear.

    • @spenserdavis788
      @spenserdavis788 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      @@leonardo448 I don't know about that. I think she means it genuinely, and it's only after seeing the pillars of fire and smoke, and being forced to look directly at the truth of the atrocities, that her spirit shifts.

    • @nicolahobbs5985
      @nicolahobbs5985 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      @@spenserdavis788Glazer has said that the mother didn’t leave the house because she was disgusted with what was going on, more that she left because she didn’t want to be close to it. He compared it to buying meat at a supermarket vs going to an abattoir.

    • @spenserdavis788
      @spenserdavis788 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      @@nicolahobbs5985 Oh yeah, that was definitely clear (and I love that metaphor). I'm not suggesting that she begins to feel bad. When I mention her spirits, I meant it more as, "I'm not having a fun time here anymore, I'm gonna go." Which is such great, silent storytelling.

  • @jhardycarroll
    @jhardycarroll 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +73

    The gradual revealing of the camp and horror was masterful.

    • @williemays2
      @williemays2 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      it's an incredible allegory for Palestine and the state of Israel

  • @singstreetcar5881
    @singstreetcar5881 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +197

    Sandra huller should have gotten a best supporting actress nomination.

    • @liamhocking5012
      @liamhocking5012 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      She's already nominated for best Actress

    • @beqamarsagishvili6988
      @beqamarsagishvili6988 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +35

      @@liamhocking5012 doesn't mean she didn't deserve Supporting actress nomination as well

    • @HahsJeje
      @HahsJeje 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      She did not get any baftas either :(

    • @DonnaAbrams-qh7zt
      @DonnaAbrams-qh7zt 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I read that she said in an interview in the past that she would never play a Nazi but this script moved her so that she broke her rule.

    • @leonardo448
      @leonardo448 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      I didn't realize she is the same actress of Anatomy of a Fall, woah what a year for her, the protagonist of two best pictures oscars nominated films.

  • @elpanchito421
    @elpanchito421 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +56

    “There’s no period sheen or glorification of its aesthetics” absolutely hits the nail on the head.

  • @GareBare90
    @GareBare90 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +70

    Glazer is the man. THE man!

  • @SEAKPhotog
    @SEAKPhotog 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +93

    That was a terific review! The best I've seen. Bravo. My wife and I saw it over the weekend and were blown away. I agree - it's a masterpiece and one of my favorite movies I've seen in a long time.
    BTW, the scenes with the Polish girl leaving fruit for the prisoners to aren't shot in night vision - they're shot as negatives, as if the Polish girl is the opposite/reverse of the daughter.

    • @rupertrooksby
      @rupertrooksby 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      they're shot in night vision. FLIR infra red cameras. Glazer: "She’s a light and she’s glowing"

  • @daniellekrammel4211
    @daniellekrammel4211 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    I am American - I saw this today in Leipzig, Germany where Sandra Hüller actually lives. The theater was pretty full, mostly people around 60-70 years old. Afterwards I desperately wanted to ask the audience members what they thought of the film. What an unforgettable film. Everyone should see it but I doubt most people will take the time to do so.

  • @moronsmincemovies
    @moronsmincemovies 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +113

    Although you mentioned it briefly, I think there are very accurate comparisons to how we treat animals we domesticate for food today. Most people want to remain ignorant of where their food comes from and how it makes it onto their grill. They just want to laugh and party while eating their steak, hot dogs, and burgers. I talk about this in our review of the movie.

    • @wowsew
      @wowsew 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      tell us how you're vegan

    • @ahnmensch3115
      @ahnmensch3115 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@wowsew Oh wow, somebody who believes that it's wrong to kill animals for our pleasure is vegan??? what??

    • @moronsmincemovies
      @moronsmincemovies 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

      @@wowsew I'm actually not, but the horrible way we treat animals is undeniable.

    • @bambina5604
      @bambina5604 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@wowsew the ones who dare to look behind the wall are vegan

    • @msspotme
      @msspotme 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Lab Meat.....

  • @m_a_k_e_n_n_a
    @m_a_k_e_n_n_a 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +27

    this distilled so many thoughts i had floating around in my brain but didn't quite have the words to accurately communicate. thank god for media literacy, this analysis was great

  • @jjbenavidez6
    @jjbenavidez6 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +48

    A great companion piece for The Zone of Interest is 1981's My Dinner With Andre.
    My Dinner With Andre tackles the same themes in a more immediate fashion, whereas The Zone of Interest seems to be a portrait/meditative piece on its themes. Both films make the same argument effectively, but in different ways. Definitely check out My Dinner With Andre if you haven't.. its fascinating

    • @Frank1e.b0i
      @Frank1e.b0i 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      That's a stretch lol

    • @bungdilly6333
      @bungdilly6333 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Thanks for the recommendation!

    • @vinicius11ariel
      @vinicius11ariel 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thanks

    • @freshalan
      @freshalan 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      whats the connection between the two movies?

    • @manantial773
      @manantial773 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Not true at all. My dinner with Andre spokes about different lifestyles, but the movies never suggest that Andre´s point view is the correct one since many of his stories are ridiculous, for example, that he was buried alive for a period of time so he could feel human..

  • @therogue1542
    @therogue1542 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

    “The Act of Killing-esque” YESS that’s exactly what I thought when I first saw that scene

    • @jeremyhopkins577
      @jeremyhopkins577 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Jonathan Glazer screened the Act of Killing for the cast before production. For him it was emblematic of what he wanted to capture with this film.

    • @therogue1542
      @therogue1542 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@jeremyhopkins577 woah, this reminded me of how the act of killing didnt win best documentary ( i thought it shouldve been the first doc to be nominated for best picture )

    • @jeremyhopkins577
      @jeremyhopkins577 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@therogue1542 It is seriously one of the most important films ever made in my opinion.

  • @RBIVids-pb9xr
    @RBIVids-pb9xr 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    I just finished watching it in a theater and so glad I didn't just rent it at home. Make me feel super uneasy

  • @bbcbbc1717
    @bbcbbc1717 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +29

    Great analysis. I loved the camera work (reality show/doco style) in this and the use of sound. Very effective and nudged the subconscious. I also found the camera work very Kubrick like which I loved.

    • @bluenick4577
      @bluenick4577 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Do not compare this trash to kubrick 😂😂😂😂

  • @Fmakegeo6
    @Fmakegeo6 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    This movie is not a drama. It's a horror. One of the best ever made

  • @christinelee4108
    @christinelee4108 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    This is quite honestly one of the best and most thoughtful reviews of a film I've ever watched. It really got to me when you touched on how evil happens in the light and goodness under the cover of darkness.

  • @jidm19
    @jidm19 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +34

    I think your commentary starting at 7:39 is... I don't know. It doesn't sit well with me. Having been to Auschwitz, those "walls between us and the artifacts" are there to preserve said artifacts, and to preserve a history that many people chose not to believe happened. Those artifacts would crumble and be forgotten if there were no walls between us and them. It's not there to make "the experience more comfortable to participate in" (7:46). It's so it can be preserved and, most importantly, not forgotten. The rooms that those artifacts are in are designed to do exactly that, NOT for the "comfort" of those visiting, because believe me, absolutely no moment being on those grounds was comfortable.
    That being said, I do very much think you're spot on with your commentary about the Polish girl being the only bright spot while hiding apples in the dirt for the workers, and her home compared to the Höss' home (starting at 9:49). For the case of the Polish family "hiding" (10:23), you can hear a man during that scene after she returns home, and he is speaking Yiddish, which was a language used BY Jewish people before the Holocaust. We never see the man, but it leads me to believe that Glazer meant for us to interpret that they were, at the very least, sympathetic towards Jews.
    There were also many, MANY non-Jewish Pols who were killed at Auschwitz. The shot of Auschwitz towards the end, with the long hallway full of photos of prisoners, is filled with non-Jewish Pols.
    (edited for spelling errors and general sentence structure)

  • @valeriobertoncello1809
    @valeriobertoncello1809 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    This analysis is so spot on

  • @nunoabreu4001
    @nunoabreu4001 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +32

    Well I just wanted to say it is truly a pleasure to follow this channel. It’s inspiring to see young people like me appreciating films such as this one and wanting to discuss them! And you were a big part of why I started enjoying them in the first place so thank you ;)

    • @madelynbaker5013
      @madelynbaker5013 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Absolutely! There is hope for the new generation of Cinema lovers!

  • @fabiesque
    @fabiesque 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    One of the best reviews I have EVER listened to. I just got out of the movie theatre where I saw the movie. This review made me appreciate twice as more.

  • @thedudewhoeatspianos
    @thedudewhoeatspianos 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Glazer explicitly confirmed your interpretation of his intentions at the Oscars.
    What a great analysis. Well done.

  • @jamescollins9178
    @jamescollins9178 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    Turning the lights on and off was giving me Jeanne Dielman vibes

    • @RB-.-
      @RB-.- 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Part of why i didnt love this. Tedium combined with long takes are a major turnoff for me in a movie

  • @TheSaltydog07
    @TheSaltydog07 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Im 71. I thought for years that if I learned enough about the Holocaust, I'd understand it. I still don't understand it. Excellent video. Thank you for a job well done. ❤

  • @Bellabaxter79
    @Bellabaxter79 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    This is by far the best review I've read. I watched at least 7 different reviews here on TH-cam and this one could explain in detail what the director wanted us to feel and think. 👏 thank you for writing a great review for an amazing, unique movie.

  • @retlwiz
    @retlwiz 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    Really liked your analysis and when you mentioned the note from the mother I think you could have gone further: she didn’t just “throw it away” but burnt it in the furnace they had in their house in the corner of the room (other furnaces are discussed in the film). This is the furnace that also provides the central heating she was at pains to pint out because of the very cold winters - so it all wraps in to your theme and expands on it.

  • @heyheyhey33351
    @heyheyhey33351 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Christian Friedel and Sandra Huller gave incredible and VERY disturbing performances. Two scenes that stuck with me: The one where the wife casually threatens the girl, telling her that she could have her husband cremate her; and the one where Hess is talking with his wife on the phone and says that he was thinking of how he could gas the attendants of the party. The idea that they were so casual and indifferent to the genocide they were committing wqs so off-putting.

  • @trao1938
    @trao1938 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    Further emphasizing the film's message are comments from viewers- more inclined to describe how the movie made them feel, rather than what it made them think. While there is plenty in The Zone of Interest to gauge our emotions, and great films often do evoke strong feelings,, this film also offers ideas and concepts to feed the intellect and challenge the mind.
    I've been disappointed by the many remarks from people expressing how this movie sounds "too disturbing" to sit through, even though it purposely avoids displaying any violent images. These same people, who strongly favor teaching the truth about slavery and Native American genocide to kids in US schools can't risk exposing their own fragile sensitivities to this historical masterwork of a film, and are emblematic of the greater problem. Because it's much more convenient to avoid that which has the potential to make us 'feel bad,' and credit that choice on our propensity to feel 'too much.' Our capacity to feel and be humanly affected is meaningless if it only serves to justify our excuses for looking away. And if it can happen with a film, it certainly can be done to those suffering and oppressed right outside our own front doors.

    • @kmbae.3211
      @kmbae.3211 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      I love this comment. I felt so deeply uncomfortable and sick to my stomach watching this movie, but I felt a responsibility to embrace it, considering it’s such a small price to pay compared to the horrors portrayed in the film. There is no empathy or understanding of others without real, scary discomfort.

    • @trao1938
      @trao1938 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@kmbae.3211 Thank you. I had a far more difficult time watching the documentary "20 Days in Mariuopol." It's graphic and devastating and I carried its impact with me weeks after.. But I knew that reporters risked their lives to share the footage, and that the Ukrainians desperately need for it to be seen.
      The Russian gov't accused the wounded and the dead in the footage of being 'crisis actors.''
      I had to watch it because Putin is counting on us tn the west to cover our eyes and ignore it.

    • @mrs.evansartyparty7349
      @mrs.evansartyparty7349 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      “If you want to make a scary movie not scary anymore, cover your ears and not your eyes.” The sound of this movie is what does it. Seeing the monster is ok, hearing it and imagining it can be horrifyingly real.

    • @DonnaAbrams-qh7zt
      @DonnaAbrams-qh7zt 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@kmbae.3211. Totally agree. We must keep the horrors of the Holocaust alive lest we let it happen again. It’s too easy to see our enemies as less than human.

  • @lisajohnson2772
    @lisajohnson2772 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    This is the best review of this movie I've seen and I am recommending it to everyone. This analysis captures the tone, the mood, the nuance, and the application of the message to us in our time.

  • @matthewalpert6891
    @matthewalpert6891 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +33

    Excellent interpretation! For me personally, I believe this film is about how evil’s goal is not to convince the masses to do its bidding and thereby sway them into adopting its way of thinking, but to numb and desensitize them to its actions. Evil ultimately knows that it cannot take hold of everyone, so it strives to be passively accepted as a way of life by the majority of people. That being said, your interpretation is completely valid, and can absolutely be argued effectively.

    • @miccorr99
      @miccorr99 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The banality of evil, Hannah Arendt

  • @guysimchony309
    @guysimchony309 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Watched the film last night and loved your analysis. You articulated a lot of things I was only vaguely feeling but not able to put my finger on. I love how you said the night vision scenes show the girl as a light in the darkness, while the Hoss home is suffused with sunlight that can’t hide the decay of their souls

  • @timwatchesmovies
    @timwatchesmovies 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    This is good stuff, appreciate your thoughts especially on the ideas of distance and the lighting contributing to that Polish girl's story.

  • @WhytheBookWins
    @WhytheBookWins 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    You always have such fantastic analysis videos!

  • @danielwilliams8419
    @danielwilliams8419 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Great analysis. I thought the modern day shots were communicating pretty strongly that it just doesn't seem possible to repair a history like this. We want to remember it, but there is no way to do that without irony. That's why the cleaning crew is featured in my opinion.

  • @PlankPlank36
    @PlankPlank36 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Exceptional analysis. Thank you. When you are still thinking about a film days after watching it speaks to its profound message

  • @yasmine9221
    @yasmine9221 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    The fact that these things are still happening in the 21st century is horrible..

  • @My20GUNS
    @My20GUNS 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    Great movie. Extremely clinical, cold, and oppressive. Several scenes and shots still stick with me over three weeks later.
    Bare minimum it should win Best Foreign Film & Best Sound. I'm hoping it'll win Best Picture.
    Edit: YAY!!! it one Best Sound and Best Foreign Film.

  • @TMish73829
    @TMish73829 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Ooph. I had so many reactionary thoughts as I was watching this but you squashed them as soon as as I had them. Great analysis. Not sure I’ve ever seen your page but definitely subscribed after this.

  • @medusa5472
    @medusa5472 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    The sanitization and cleaning throughout the movie really stood out to me from the get-go.
    It was always in the context of wanting to rid themselves of something reminding them of wrongdoings. The blood on the boots, the ashes in the river and in the nose, the fur coat that she wanted cleaned and repaired and the lipstick on her skin, his pe*** after he slept w the woman in his office,... Always pushing the smallest detail out of (mind's) eye that could confront them with the horrific acts, never wanting anything reminding them.
    And then we see the cleaners in modern day Auschwitz. The place felt cared for. For the first time in the movie cleaning didn't feel like something to me that's meant to get rid of something but to care for a place that enables more people to remind themselves of those horrific acts. Never forget, never again.

    • @Loftikaz
      @Loftikaz หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      That's really it

  • @MacMov
    @MacMov 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I guess one of the most important conclusions is how we tend to distance ourselves by saying people like the Hösses or other Nazis were evil monsters. They were not. They were husbands, fathers, brothers and sons. Of course it's comforting to see them as not human because then we won't have to reflect on ourselves. With that abstract concept of demonizing them (which is understandable considering their horrific crimes!), we completely miss out the point why they did what they did and how they were able to do it while actually really believing they did the best they could to provide for themselves, their families, their society and for mankind, sometimes even without being rascists or anti-Semites. Believing we ourselves would never be able to do this because we aren't evil monsters but on the right side of history is the direct way into the next dictatorship or even the next genocide, probably only of a different kind. It's not like the world had to wait all that long after Nazi-Germany had been defeated.

  • @nosferadu
    @nosferadu 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Hey, what a great analysis. Answered every question I had after watching the film.

  • @rpg-easyas-123
    @rpg-easyas-123 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Dude this is so fucking good. Congrats. Best Oscar Expert video so far

  • @BrockSamsonite
    @BrockSamsonite 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

    The ending really hit me hard because ive been to both holocost museums in los angeles and dc and i remember the shoes and ehen i saw the chamber being swept out i immediately made the connection to how the simple act of sweeping is supposed to represent the chambers being sweep clean of ash like they would be at the end of an oven cycle, almost as if to say its the end of our cycle throught movie and story.

  • @jackbailey3049
    @jackbailey3049 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Genuinely one of the best TH-cam channels for movie analysis on this platform bro

  • @DianaMarieSix
    @DianaMarieSix 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    This movie was brilliant , so eerie. I’ve never seen anything like it.

  • @taylormullen2815
    @taylormullen2815 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I cannot wait to watch it on Max. It's going to be a feast for my eyes. With no film being used, the movie manages to look old and modern at the same time.

  • @purekinema
    @purekinema 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +44

    Your main takeaway is that we are supposed to see ourselves in the Hösses. Glazer himself pushed this interpretation in interviews. But my takeaway is almost the exact opposite of yours. For me, the most striking element of The Zone of Interest is that all the superficial ways in which the Höss family is similar to us just serve to make their *unique* evil so much more viscerally frightening and horrific.
    My interpretation is different because I believe it's way too convenient to draw a line between feeling comfortable and decorating your house while wars are happening in the world (what we do) and deliberately orchestrating a plan to murder over a million people virtually with your bare hands (what Höss did). Any line you draw between these two things is almost offensive in its generalization. Höss is *very* tuned into the suffering around him - he personally runs the camps and wipes blood off his boots - he just doesn't care. His preoccupation with gassing people is something we cannot even contemplate. The contrast between a normal family garden on the one hand, and the callousness and evil of a kind never seen before or since on the other, induces a sick horror and serves as a testament to the backdrop of one of the worst atrocities in history.
    I agree with you that this horror comes from the realization that the Nazis were human beings and their acts emerged from human nature. And yes, it serves as another awakening to never allow such a horror happen again. But my interpretation diverges from yours in that I think it's crucial to recognize that there is a circuit breaker to that part of our human nature, a red line that prevents us from devolving into such atrocities. It is extremely rare for a nation to descend into the moral depravity of Nazi Germany - if that has ever even happened. Nothing today approaches the horrors of the Holocaust on any level - not Ukraine, Israel, Gaza, the Southern border. It's not just numbers - the Holocaust by its nature was a singular event, one of a tiny number of times in history that a government resolved to exterminate a population through an explicit Final Solution, and not as part of war for conquest but purely for ideological reasons. The horror we feel comes from seeing that red line broken, not as part of a melodrama or thriller but as a shockingly real depiction of reality as it actually happened in all of its blandness.
    The analogy you made that is most comparable is animal agriculture, but I think that comparison illustrates my point about the circuit breaker. With animals, that red line just doesn't exist in our brains, and humans throughout history have had no qualms about killing animals for food. Not so with people.
    My interpretation of the ending is that Höss is descending the stairs to hell.
    Regarding the Polish girl, I've seen others point out that her scenes fade in from Höss reading fairy tales to his daughter, almost as if to say that this contrast of good was just a wish upon a star during the Holocaust.
    Thanks for your analysis. The Zone of Interest is my favorite film of 2023 as well. It is a heavy and shocking film however you choose to interpret it.

    • @mgway4661
      @mgway4661 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      We try to envision the Holocaust and the Nazis as a one-off event in human history. No doubt the worst in terms of scale but we have always been this way. It starts with dehumanization.. the Nazis dehumanized their victims in order to facilitate the mass murders and we in turn dehumanize the Nazis by making them larger than life mega-monsters. Niether are true. We are just good as humans at creating an illusion and proceeding to live inside of it. The Nazis were living, thinking, breathing, human beings and they are just like you and me. History does not happen in a vacuum and the more I study the Holocaust, its causes and consequences the more I realize that even the most evil of Nazis were in fact human beings. It may have seemed to those that weren’t paying attention like it just came out of nowhere with no warning but it didn’t. Jews were hated in Germany long before Hitler and National Socialism took control. The extermination of the Jews was not an initial war aim but rather an evolution of a multitude of factors which tragically led Germany down the darkest path of its history

    • @sarabrucker7847
      @sarabrucker7847 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Has a nation ever descended into the moral depravity of Nazi Germany? Absolutely.
      The genocide of the First Nations of the United States is a very serious example. The estimated loss of life in numbered only goes up over time.
      Rounding up Japanese people into internment camps was a close call, although they weren’t death camps.
      And in fact, we’re not far off now. Law enforcement can pretty much perjure, rape, and murder without any consequences, sometimes retaining work after discovery. And it’s particularly true if the victims are part of the “criminal class.”
      Cambodian, Rwandan, and other genocides have also been national tragedies elsewhere

    • @RB-.-
      @RB-.- 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      The dad is a sociopathic workaholic robot & the mom is obsessed with materialism, status, power and not giving up the good life.

    • @Helene3000
      @Helene3000 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Our current obsession with capitalist rampant consumption is killing the entire planet and thousands of species. Enslaved people suffer too.

    • @KayButtonJay
      @KayButtonJay 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      We are way more like that family than what you’re comfortable with acknowledging

  • @alfredomontes376
    @alfredomontes376 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    This film is incredible because of how the film makes you really think. The family acts happily despite the heinous acts that’s happening next to them. Rudolph Hoss acting like a normal family man despite the job he does. The ending reminding the audience with the reality we live in. It also makes you ask the question “How can people live with themselves knowing people are literally dying next to them?” This is a film that will stick with people for a long time and it’s a reminder of what the past has taught us.

  • @alisterfolson
    @alisterfolson หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I thought him cutting the lights off/checking the doors in his home at night was what all of us guys do at home, more or less. I like the thoughts interpreted in this video; new sub!

  • @loladavino3071
    @loladavino3071 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Remarkable analysis and review. Brilliant. Thank you.

  • @vinicius11ariel
    @vinicius11ariel 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Your ending part was really well written and said.

  • @madelineo4128
    @madelineo4128 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    This is my favorite analysis of this movie!

  • @sandrahatherley2184
    @sandrahatherley2184 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I will watch this movie again because of it's depth. Thank God for A24. Some of them...Midsommer, The Green Knight, Lamb, Everything All At Once. I think they also did "The Killing Of A Sacred Deer. Many more that we probably would not have seem otherwise.

  • @antm2296
    @antm2296 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Just walked out of the theatre and sat down with a beer by myself. This movie absolutely just numbed me. That ending scene, it’s was like Hoss was looking into the future, at how these crimes would be remembered. He borked but nothing came out, he had nothing inside him, not emotionally or mentally. Completely devoid of humanity. Very good film

  • @lisawithans
    @lisawithans 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    My Mom was 12 years old when this took place. She was told by teachers and others NOT to ask questions. She was sent to the country side when bombing took place in the city. My Mom said my grand father was threatened plenty of times to be thrown in concentration camps for voicing his opinion! Germans were told to shut your mouth! It’s horrible what happened. My Mom had a friend who she played with and when she went upstairs for dinner and bedtime. The friend and family were gone in the morning, door wide open. Horrible happenings! War is NO good for anyone!

  • @jakobervorhood
    @jakobervorhood 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I saw this movie 7 days ago and I was, as you say, chewing on some of the scenes your video just enlightend me on. good analysis, thank you.

  • @squeebplays2158
    @squeebplays2158 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Pretty sure the end was showing that he may be terminally ill. I don't think there was any guilt from him.

    • @Jeff-66
      @Jeff-66 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      He wasn't. He was healthy. He died by hanging after being found guilty of war crimes. Fun fact, he was hanged right outside the crematorium at Auschwitz.

  • @raymondhodgson1190
    @raymondhodgson1190 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    One of the things that seems to stick with me about the camera work is all of those wide shots where we can see a glimpse of what's happening over the wall even as the characters are (intentionally) walking in a way that screens it from their view. Such a simple and effective way of getting the message across.

  • @Kat-nv8es
    @Kat-nv8es 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    The images of the beautiful vegetable & flower crops in the gardens, that had been fertilised by the ashes of the people killed next door, was brilliant & grotesque.

  • @ThatsJustMyBabyDaddy
    @ThatsJustMyBabyDaddy 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

    I was struck by how this film so badly wanted me to feel disturbed and uncomfortable. But I just couldn't help remembering that this kind of evil went on in the American South for centuries.

  • @moviehusbands
    @moviehusbands 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Amazing work Cole 🙏🏻

  • @girlscarf
    @girlscarf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Watched this movie yesterday. I think its a movie everyone needs to watch.

  • @tapuzgordon678
    @tapuzgordon678 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Beautifully written video. Incredibly put

  • @krzyztof85
    @krzyztof85 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Interesting review, but I fundamentally disagree with one of the points. I agree the banality of evil is not the right phrase to describe what's happening, however, while these people are concerned with their own comfort & providing for their family, they also believe what they are doing is right. They are all (in their own ways) active participants in what goes on beyond the wall. It's a means to an end, yes, but it is also an end in itself. Their lives are (in their eyes) manifestly & rightly improved because of the act of mass murder they are participating in.
    As for the ending, which is a brilliant narrative detour, it's both a reckoning &, perhaps, a moment of realisation, but the final flip back & his descent reminds us he carried on with what he was doing nonetheless.

  • @better_dont
    @better_dont 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great Review! Thank you!

  • @elliganzweitweg
    @elliganzweitweg 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    I can't wait to see this. I am Austrian, so this is about my people and our complicity to this day.

  • @eriklarson5874
    @eriklarson5874 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    I’m watching it in an hour, I’ll edit and put my thoughts here when I get back.
    Edit: … this is very experimental and unnerving. The score sounds straight out of hell. Not my favorite of the BP noms, but one that I will be thinking about for quite a long time.

    • @angelotrinidad6888
      @angelotrinidad6888 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      How did you like it?

    • @eriklarson5874
      @eriklarson5874 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@angelotrinidad6888I liked the experimental nature of the film, but I will need a week to really give a definite answer

    • @DonnaAbrams-qh7zt
      @DonnaAbrams-qh7zt 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@angelotrinidad6888. I agree with Eric. You have to think about this movie for awhile to decide how you feel about it. I saw it a couple of days ago and I’m still rolling it around in my mind. Things that seem unimportant when you watch the movie stick in your brain until you admit how horrific they were. Hedwig proudly showing her garden to her mother while the sound of guns explodes in the background for example.

  • @pascal72ify
    @pascal72ify 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Excellent movie review. Spot on; rings so very true.

  • @ICOEPR
    @ICOEPR 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I believe Glazer has said that night vision was the only way they could shoot a those scenes without using artificial lighting.

  • @nyknick821
    @nyknick821 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Very well done. Thank you.

  • @Baueresque
    @Baueresque 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Great view on this stunning film.

  • @patrickhoxie9175
    @patrickhoxie9175 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Ash was a big character in the film. I felt like ash was always present in the background. The wrenching on the stairwell after the decadent party felt like it symbolized his own disgust with himself and his small moment of self reflection. He also seemed awkward around the rest of the party goers like he’s being used to carry out this mass murder.

    • @davidmorris3089
      @davidmorris3089 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The party scene and his retching I think were the last gasps of his humanity, recognizing the horror of the Final Solution and reflecting on what history would think of it-as represented by Höss looking at US in the darkened corridor and by the scenes of Auschwitz today. Yet he suppresses that brief flicker of awareness, puts on his hat and keeps going, descending into the darkness of hell. And indeed, in real life, he would leave that meeting to carry out the extermination of Hungary’s entire Jewish population, which he did in only a couple months during the summer of 1944.

  • @maximilianschulz6455
    @maximilianschulz6455 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    The only cineastic experience similar to that was Shoah by Claude Lanzman

  • @judgeholden4208
    @judgeholden4208 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great vid. Quick question if I may. Who is the artist of that large yellow print/painting directly behind the computer monitor? Very interesting artwork. Curious to learn more... Many thanks

  • @Eray-ps3nw
    @Eray-ps3nw 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I like this kind of movies. Seeing how people take these irrational, brutal ideologies for granted must cause people somewhere in the world to question their own ideologies and the system they live in.

  • @sarabrucker7847
    @sarabrucker7847 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    MANY people besides Jews were camp inmates. The Romani (“gypsy”) population lost a greater percentage of their population than Jews did, and Polish people were automatically sent to the camps.
    I don’t know if it’s true now, but in the 90s, if you went on an English speaking tour of the camps, they would only talk about Jews being inmates, and if you went on the Polish speaking tour, they only talked about Polish inmates.
    I was raised Jewish with lots of Holocaust education, but I was infuriated to discover in college how many other groups were targeted. Jehovah’s Witnesses, gay people, disabled people, anyone found having or giving abortions, etc. etc.
    We all need to learn that “never again” means everyone.

  • @keithoyoung34
    @keithoyoung34 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Fantastic review of a masterpiece!

  • @mh605
    @mh605 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    A great review! Thanks.

  • @FlaneurSolitaire
    @FlaneurSolitaire 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Excellent analysis of the deeper implications of this film. I discovered Glazer about twenty years ago, when I first watched "Birth", and immediately thought it was a masterpiece. He is one of the most daring, relevant filmmakers of our time.

  • @KiraPhilips
    @KiraPhilips 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Thank you for acknowledging the atrocity that is factory farming. MASS suffering, torture, and slaughter, yet everyone turns a blind eye.

  • @nate-it9xq
    @nate-it9xq 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Something else tying into your theme of light and darkness is the title made of white letters being consumed by the darkness. Literally showing the words "The Zone of Interest" being darkened, just as Hoss' zone of interest debatably darkens in the end, though obviously not fully.

  • @leviturner4565
    @leviturner4565 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Thank you for these videos. I love your analysis and this is easily my Favorite of 2023

  • @ThomasKirby-ub4vy
    @ThomasKirby-ub4vy 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    What I love is this film along with glazers under the skin MAKES THE AUDIENCE decide what the characters are feeling and thinking when I first saw under the skin, I was confused as hell but watching a second time I understood that glazer dosent TELL you anything, he SHOWS what the alien is going through and her face after humans help her up, her face when she looks in the mirror recognizing her own self. Here it’s the same. After watching a third time I noticed that rudolf in little bits and pieces does not even really like his job or their house. The opening scene has him staring into the ceiling as he tries to sleep, even at the camp he’s sort of looking to the left and smoking a cigarette outside he leans to the right ignoring the wall. Even when he moves away from his house he seems a little more happy watching the marching band, playing with that dog, ect. And yes when he almost throws up his evil sprit at the end but he can’t do it. He realizes that years from now, these people will be remembered and this building will be a museum some day so… it’ll all turn out good in the end. Time to go to bed

  • @desmondtokohachi
    @desmondtokohachi 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The credits with that unsettling song at the end had me frozen in the theatre..

  • @user-iq7th6rd7s
    @user-iq7th6rd7s 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Smells the most haunting how they could live with that and not be affected and they weren't affected.😢