
2008
95 minutes
Not Rated
by Scott Mendelson
There is a moment in the middle of Istvan Szabo's Sunshine where John Neville angrily confronts his Jewish relatives after the Holocaust. Ralph Fiennes is tearfully recounting how his father was frozen to death in a concentration camp, when Neville wonders out loud why they didn't do something. Sure they had guns, but there were tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands of Jews and only thousands, if not hundreds of Nazis. It's a striking moment because it was the first time I had seen a picture involving the Holocaust that dared to portray the Jewish victims as anything but hapless victims of an inexplicable evil. Of courses, in hindsight its easy to ask why more didn't rise up against the Nazis. Sure, thousands of them would have been killed in the process, but as long as one of the dead wasn't you, why not?
I bring up Sunshine because it remains a better, more striking fable that deals with many of the same issues as Vicente Amorim's Good. Based on an allegedly classic 1981 play, this small-scale drama attempts to capture the feelings that many ordinary Germans had as the Nazi party slowly took complete control of the motherland. It's a fascinating idea that still resonates: how do you succeed in a corrupt government without becoming corrupt yourself? And if you do see evil all around you, do you sacrifice your own comfort to speak out, or do you just sit back and hope someone else martyrs themselves instead of you? But the ideas at the heart of the film outweigh the execution of the film itself.

Again, this is an idea that is always worth exploring, the struggle of (to quote a recent high-profile tent-poler) 'trying to be decent men, in an indecent time'. But the fatal flaw of the story is that our protagonist isn't just decent, he's also gloriously naive. Time and time again, he tries to reason with his Jewish friend, Maurice (Jason Issacs), claiming that Hitler's reign is just a fad and that things will blow over soon enough. This may have been a reasonable position for an educated man to have in the mid 1930s, but John clings to this belief well past the point of self-delusion.

Story flaws aside, the film looks splendid, and the acting is fine. Mortensen does righteous anguish as well as anyone, and Jason Isaacs provides a solid counterpoint, both as a foil and a direct consequence of Holder's bad judgment. The scenes between the Isaac and Mortensen are easily the film's highlights. And the picture ends on a jaw dropping five-minute shot that renders the fantastically terrible as plausible and frighteningly mundane.

Grade: C+
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