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DramaHistoryWar

The Zone of Interest

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The commandant of Auschwitz, Rudolf Höss, and his wife Hedwig, strive to build a dream life for their family in a house and garden next to the camp.

Release Date : 2023-12-15

Language :GermanPolishYiddish

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : A24Film4 ProductionsAccess EntertainmentJW FilmsExtreme Emotions

Production Country : PolandUnited KingdomUnited States of America

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Christian Friedel

Character Name : Rudolf Höss

Original Name : Christian Friedel

Gender : Male

Sandra Hüller

Character Name : Hedwig Höss

Original Name : Sandra Hüller

Gender : Female

Johann Karthaus

Character Name : Claus Höss

Original Name : Johann Karthaus

Gender : Male

Luis Noah Witte

Character Name : Hans Höss

Original Name : Luis Noah Witte

Gender : Male

Nele Ahrensmeier

Character Name : Inge-Brigit Höss

Original Name : Nele Ahrensmeier

Gender : Male

Lilli Falk

Character Name : Heideraud Höss

Original Name : Lilli Falk

Gender : Female

Anastazja Drobniak

Character Name : Annagret Höss

Original Name : Anastazja Drobniak

Gender : Male

Cecylia Pekala

Character Name : Annagret Höss

Original Name : Cecylia Pekala

Gender : Male

Kalman Wilson

Character Name : Annagret Höss

Original Name : Kalman Wilson

Gender : Male

Medusa Knopf

Character Name : Elfriede

Original Name : Medusa Knopf

Gender : Female

Maximilian Beck

Character Name : Schwarzer

Original Name : Maximilian Beck

Gender : Male

Andrey Isaev

Character Name : Bronek

Original Name : Andrey Isaev

Gender : Male

Julia Babiarz

Character Name : Young Polish Housemaid

Original Name : Julia Babiarz

Gender : Male

Stephanie Petrowitz

Character Name : Sophie

Original Name : Stephanie Petrowitz

Gender : Female

Martyna Poznanski

Character Name : Marta

Original Name : Martyna Poznanski

Gender : Male

Zuzanna Kobiela

Character Name : Aniela

Original Name : Zuzanna Kobiela

Gender : Male

Benjamin Utzerath

Character Name : Fritz Sander, Topf & Sons

Original Name : Benjamin Utzerath

Gender : Male

Thomas Neumann

Character Name : Karl Prüfer, Topf & Sons

Original Name : Thomas Neumann

Gender : Male

Klaudiusz Kaufmann

Character Name : Obersturmbannführer Bischoff

Original Name : Klaudiusz Kaufmann

Gender : Male

Justyna Szklarska

Character Name : Prisoner Gardener #1

Original Name : Justyna Szklarska

Gender : Male

Kacper Piwko

Character Name : Prisoner Gardener #2

Original Name : Kacper Piwko

Gender : Male

Marie Rosa Tietjen

Character Name : Hedwig's Friend #1

Original Name : Marie Rosa Tietjen

Gender : Female

Antje Falk

Character Name : Hedwig's Friend #2

Original Name : Antje Falk

Gender : Male

Jakub Sierenberg

Character Name : SS Officer #1

Original Name : Jakub Sierenberg

Gender : Male

Joerg Sierenberg

Character Name : SS Officer #2

Original Name : Joerg Sierenberg

Gender : Male

Joerg Giessler

Character Name : SS Officer #3

Original Name : Joerg Giessler

Gender : Male

Heiko Lange

Character Name : SS Officer #4

Original Name : Heiko Lange

Gender : Male

Marek Łukasik

Character Name : SS Officer #5

Original Name : Marek Łukasik

Gender : Male

Bernhard Schirmer

Character Name : SS Horseman

Original Name : Bernhard Schirmer

Gender : Male

Julia Polaczek

Character Name : Aleksandra Bystroń-Kołodziejczyk

Original Name : Julia Polaczek

Gender : Female

Shenja Lacher

Character Name : Gauleiter Fritz Bracht (voice)

Original Name : Shenja Lacher

Gender : Male

Imogen Kogge

Character Name : Hedwig's Mother

Original Name : Imogen Kogge

Gender : Female

Wiktoria Wisniewska

Character Name : Heideraud's School Friend

Original Name : Wiktoria Wisniewska

Gender : Male

Paulina Burzyk

Character Name : Claus' Girlfriend

Original Name : Paulina Burzyk

Gender : Male

Anna Marciniszyn

Character Name : Redheaded Woman

Original Name : Anna Marciniszyn

Gender : Male

Agnieszka Wierny

Character Name : Aleksandra's Mother

Original Name : Agnieszka Wierny

Gender : Male

Patryk Mika

Character Name : Polish Partisan at Table

Original Name : Patryk Mika

Gender : Male

Tomasz Piwko

Character Name : Kapo Bohner

Original Name : Tomasz Piwko

Gender : Male

Carsten Koch

Character Name : War-Wounded Soldier #1

Original Name : Carsten Koch

Gender : Male

Heinz Nielow

Character Name : War-Wounded Soldier #2

Original Name : Heinz Nielow

Gender : Male

Christine Schröder

Character Name : Woman in Park with Dog

Original Name : Christine Schröder

Gender : Male

Marnius Fislage

Character Name : Höss' Adjutant

Original Name : Marnius Fislage

Gender : Male

Ralph Herforth

Character Name : Oswald Pohl

Original Name : Ralph Herforth

Gender : Male

Daniel Holzberg

Character Name : Gerhard Maurer

Original Name : Daniel Holzberg

Gender : Male

Rainer Haustein

Character Name : Richard Glücks

Original Name : Rainer Haustein

Gender : Male

Daniel Hoffman

Character Name : Dr. Meindl, Steyr-Daimier-Puch

Original Name : Daniel Hoffman

Gender : Male

Wolfgang Lampl

Character Name : Hans Burger

Original Name : Wolfgang Lampl

Gender : Male

Oscar Lebeck

Character Name : Glücks' Adjutant

Original Name : Oscar Lebeck

Gender : Male

Christian Willy

Character Name : SS Doctor

Original Name : Christian Willy

Gender : Male

Freya Kreutzkam

Character Name : Eleanor Pohl

Original Name : Freya Kreutzkam

Gender : Female

Leo Meier

Character Name : IKL Announcer (voice)

Original Name : Leo Meier

Gender : Male

Barbara Koszałka

Character Name : Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum Cleaner

Original Name : Barbara Koszałka

Gender : Female

Izabela Bara

Character Name : Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum Cleaner

Original Name : Izabela Bara

Gender : Male

Anna Kuwik

Character Name : Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum Cleaner

Original Name : Anna Kuwik

Gender : Male

Mariola Karczewska

Character Name : Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum Cleaner

Original Name : Mariola Karczewska

Gender : Male

Halina Drzymota

Character Name : Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum Cleaner

Original Name : Halina Drzymota

Gender : Male

Dominika Matonóg

Character Name : Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum Cleaner

Original Name : Dominika Matonóg

Gender : Male

Ewelina Kaczor

Character Name : Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum Cleaner

Original Name : Ewelina Kaczor

Gender : Male

Małgorzata Żurek

Character Name : Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum Cleaner

Original Name : Małgorzata Żurek

Gender : Female

Barbara Jakubowska

Character Name : Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum Cleaner

Original Name : Barbara Jakubowska

Gender : Male

Elżbieta Bronka

Character Name : Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum Cleaner

Original Name : Elżbieta Bronka

Gender : Female

Zuzanna Janusik

Character Name : Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum Cleaner

Original Name : Zuzanna Janusik

Gender : Male

Sascha Maaz

Character Name : Arthur Liebehenschel (uncredited)

Original Name : Sascha Maaz

Gender : Male

Ralf Zillmann

Character Name : Hoffmann (uncredited)

Original Name : Ralf Zillmann

Gender : Male

Christopher Manavi

Character Name : Minor Role (uncredited)

Original Name : Christopher Manavi

Gender : Male

Reviews

L

Lachlan Thiele

@lachlanthiele

2023-05-28

INT. LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS - NIGHT Auschwitz is the location of the world's most unforgivable crime — where humanity lost itself. An area forever marked with the horrors of xenophobia and a story that filmmakers continuously attempt to display on the screen. While holocaust cinema isn't being worked into the ground like other genres, there hasn't been a breath of fresh air for a while.  The Zone of Interest is that breath. From the get-go, you're engulfed back into Auschwitz, except in this film, there is a gorgeous house bordering the concentration camp. Immediately this large grey wall hiding the atrocities is juxtaposed with the family's beautiful garden, which their mother wishes to continue improving, never mind the continuous screaming and low rumbling furnace in the area. What Johnathan Glazer does with the sound design of this film is incredible; through audio alone, you're left with a sense of dread; how could you sleep when all you can hear are screams? The film opens with a black screen and an audio scape, immediately setting the tone.  The Zone of Interest layers many elements to create a narrative worth seeing. A narrative we know but in a brand new presentation.  FADE OUT.

M

Manuel São Bento

@msbreviews

2023-10-11

FULL SPOILER-FREE REVIEW @ https://fandomwire.com/the-zone-of-interest-bfi-london-film-festival-review-one-of-the-most-important-films-of-our-time/ "The Zone of Interest is one of the most memorable, remarkable films of the last few years. Jonathan Glazer achieves a fascinating dissociation between the general tone of the movie and the mundane actions of the protagonist family, portraying the unbelievably shocking global apathy in the face of the greatest crime in human history. An extremely complicated viewing, excruciatingly frustrating, full of negative emotions, and not very accessible to the general public. The atmospheric, static cinematography, together with the powerful score and especially the background sounds that will haunt any viewer, justify the use of the term "masterpiece" to technically describe the film. But more important than discussing technicalities and the explored themes, or rating a movie like this, is learning from the mistakes of the past that sadly insist on persevering..." Rating: ?

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2023-11-23

Christian Friedel is quite effective in his portrayal of the Nazi commandant Rudolf Höss here. He and wife Hedwig (Sandra Hüller) offer us one of the most stark contradictions I think I've ever seen on screen. The beautifully manicured garden of a delightful family home with an unique next door neighbour. That would be the Auschwitz concentration camp of which he was in control. We follow his selection to run the place, his increasing role in implementing the extermination processes and then gradually, as he is promoted again, their realisation that the idyllic life they want for themselves is doomed. It's the brutal comparisons that work best here. We don't really see anything graphic on screen, that's all left to our already well enough developed imagination. The blissful ignorance of their children, the ample supply of food and the prevailing attitudes that nothing at all is amiss compares frighteningly with the real life ghastliness of those just a few feet across a large concrete wall. I suppose it could have more meat on it's bones - maybe just a little too much is left to our own interpretation and it can be a little slow at times, but it still delivers well as a template for just how many people thought the mass killings was hardly more important than whether or not they'd run out of eggs. It's not an history lesson - there are corners cut and licence is certainly taken with some of the timelines, but it's still a poignant look at human behaviour that's well worth a watch.

B

Brent Marchant

@Brent_Marchant

2024-01-28

Some movies just have to be seen, even if they make for a difficult watch, and writer-director Jonathan Glazer’s latest is one of those pictures. While this offering is at times a bit uneven, when it’s on, it’s on, leaving a powerfully indelible mark on viewers, one that you feel in your gut and your heart and can’t get out of your mind. The film tells the unnerving story of the family of Auschwitz commandant Rudolf Höss (Christian Friedel). They reside directly next door to the infamous Nazi concentration camp, somehow managing to live seemingly “normal” lives in the shadow of this horrendously notorious facility. What’s most chilling, however, is that the family seems largely oblivious to the atrocities taking place on their doorstep, focusing more on their social activities and material possessions instead, even with the routine sounds of gunfire and the sight of billowing smoke from mass crematoriums filling the surrounding skies. In portraying this, the filmmaker doesn’t need to resort to graphic, gratuitous imagery to make his point about the unspeakable acts unfolding so close to home; comparatively simpler depictions of these events (and their aftermath) speak volumes instead, creating some of the most implicitly unsettling sights ever captured on film. As a consequence, this approach really makes one wonder how anybody could be so wantonly callous and unfeeling, making for truly troubling viewing. Yet it’s also the kind of imagery that has to be seen for its full impact to sink in. This Oscar nominee for best picture – and the recipient of numerous other competition and film festival accolades throughout awards season – richly deserves the attention it has garnered, even if it’s an inherently disturbing watch (sensitive viewers take note). To be sure, there are some pacing issues that could stand to be rectified, and a few story threads could use better clarity, but the picture’s superb cinematography and fine performances by its excellent ensemble cast (especially Sandra Hüller as the commandant’s self-absorbed wife) are undeniably noteworthy. This might be a film that no one wants to screen – but that everybody nevertheless should.

C

Cinema_Snobb

@Cinema_Snobb

2024-02-29

Even in the middle of a war, there are two world's that exist side by side. One of ever day life. Raising kids. Working a job. Gardening. Having lunch with friends. Yet...over the wall is horrors. Rudolf Hoss is a commandant at Auschwitz during World War II. His wife Hedwig, played by Sandra Huller, and his children all live in the family homes over the wall from the camp. They live a normal life, and Hedwig prides herself on the beautiful flowers and swimming pool to enjoy. And just over the wall Jews are be incinerated. When Rudolf gets a transfer, Hedwig's life goes into turmoil at the thought of leaving the lovely home she loves. And just over the wall Jews are being incinerated. There's a haunting scene that shows the results of Hedwig's gardening. It shows close-ups of the all the different flowers and plants that have been lovingly been cultivated. They are stunningly beautiful. In the background the sounds of barking dogs and screaming and yelling can be heard. And just over the wall Jews are being incinerated. There is so much about this film that is disturbing. It presents an angle to the war and the concentration camps that I haven't seen before. We often forget about "normal" life going on at the same time. Huller is excellent, just as she was in "Anatomy of a Fall". The film is leisurely and quiet. It doesn't show the horrors of what is going on next door, but it doesn't need to since those horrors permeate every scene. One of the biggest horrors is actually how people can go about living their every day life with exterminations only yards away.

B

BornKnight

@BornKnight

2024-02-21

The Zone of Interest is a 2023 historical drama film written and directed by Jonathan Glazer, loosely based on the 2014 novel by Martin Amis, that based herself on the life that Rudolf Höss, Nazi commandant of Auschwitz concentration camp from 1940-43 must had in that time in his residence, just at the side of the camp. It premiered at the 76th Cannes Film Festival, winning both the Grand Prix and FIPRESCI Prize. For the 96th Academy Awards, it received 5 nominations (including Best Motion Picture, Best International Feature Film, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Sound) - for me best sound is almost a win, and have great chances for best international movie and adapted screenplay. Both Christian Friedel as Rudolf Höss and Sandra Hüller (from Anatomy of a Fall) as Hedwig Höss are exceptional in their roles. It focus on the idyllic live of the Nazi commander, in his house on the most normal life conditions, while the Holocaust and the killing machine he created works at just some meters of distance. The camera focus on medium and large plans, often showing the life of the dreams, but on the horizon we often see signs of the terror like smoke from the locomotives and from the enormous chimneys at the distance. We also have other signs, extremely subtle, like the sound of shouts and shots at the background, that only shows as more close in rare sequences. Other sequences like the girl, shoot in Infrared that left at night apples and fruits for the camp workers are just haunting (and the cause of one of the more aggressive shout sequence I mention above). Interesting enough is the view as close the view of the concentration camp is on the movie in the past, and in the present as a memorial. Both are unmistakable, but in either vision a far cry from what the reality must have been inside them. For the movie is a 8.6 from 10.0 / A- and a must see for 2024.

M

MovieGuys

@MovieGuys

2024-05-04

The Zone of Interest takes the notion of the "banality of evil", back to its true origin, the family home. All human evil starts with a home. In this instance, the home of a concentration camp commander, Rudolf Höss, of Auschwitz and his family. The laid back ease of middle class family life, of an upper management level Nazi, is juxtaposed with suffering of people (Jews, gypsies, homosexuals, political dissidents, religious minorities and yes even some allied soldiers, who were prisoners of war), who quite literally reside, over the fence, in the concentration camp, Hoss oversees. This is a quietly horrifying film where the an idyllic and wholly familiar family setting is punctured, by the occasional sounds of misery and death, emanating from neighbouring death camp. Smoke stacks, burn human remains, that rise beyond the family fence line. In another compelling scene, a Hoss family riverside outing is disrupted by human ash, floating with the waters current. The Zone of Interest is not a demonstrably violent film. Violence is hinted at and as we can see, is psychologically and physically partitioned off, from the peaceful home life, of Hoss and his family. This is a compelling film but I did feel it overplayed its hand somewhat with discordant music and oddly dissonant night vision scenes, with a girl apparently trying to help the victims of the camps, by leaving food for them, at work sites, concealed next to their tools. In summary, a disturbingly influential film, that looks openly and honestly, at where evil resides.

F

FilmRaj

@FilmRaj

2024-03-19

A subtle horrific historic narrative of the Holocaust.

R

rsanek

@rsanek

2024-03-28

So much potential but very disappointing.

R

r96sk

@r96sk

2024-09-11

Not particularly my type of movie, with it being more 'artsy' than anything else, but I can still acknowledge it as being good. It's miles better, even for someone like me with the aforementioned, than it probably has any right to be. It does, in my eyes, start off too slowly, though the longer it went on the more I could appreciate it - particularly from a filmmaking perspective. As you would expect with the subject matter, 'The Zone of Interest' makes for uncomfortable but important viewing. Sandra Hüller has relatively little to work with, though still manages to put in a standout showing. I remember seeing her about during the award season when this movie was released, based on this I am expecting an even better performance in 'Anatomy of a Fall' - gotta get that watched soon!

J

JustCare

@JustCare

2024-10-03

Exceptionally disturbing, with an undertone of horror and dread that you cannot quite pinpoint. At every moment, this film indeed does draw your Zone of Interest away from who would typically be considered the main characters, to the background. Sometimes it is a background visual of the fence of Auschwitz, or a sound eminating from over that fence. But often it is so much more miniscule, items and actions that would usually be ignored - lipstick, for instance. The creators have done a truly moving job explaining the gut-punch feeling and disgust of the time period without being actually visually violent. Instead, they let your mind wander, which I find to be potentially more emotionally challenging.