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"Not to banalise, not to rewrite, but to keep the discussion
going": Radu Mihaileanu's Train of Life
By Stefan Steinberg
26 November 1998
The 8th Cottbus Film Festival of young East European film was
also the venue for the German premiere of Train de Vie
( Train of Life) by the Rumanian director Radu Mihaileanu.
The film is guaranteed a controversial reception should it reach
German audiences (up until now it has no German distributor),
above all for its subject matter--the use of humour in dealing
with the deportation of the Jews during the Second World War.
The film invites comparison with the Italian film star Roberto
Benigni's recent project Life is Beautiful (more below).
In the opinion of this writer, Mihaileanu has made a far better
film.
The story: in 1941 Schlomo the Fool runs into his shtetl (a
Jewish village in Eastern Europe) to inform the village elders
that all the adjoining Jewish settlements have been overrun by
the Nazis. Their village is next. Having informed them of the
danger, Schlomo also comes up with a solution. The villagers should
acquire a train. Half the village should dress themselves as German
soldiers, the other half as refugees, and they should deport themselves
in exactly the opposite direction from the Nazi death camps. Schlomo's
advice is accepted and the undertaking begins. A meeting of the
village is convened and the village elder calls for volunteers
to act as Nazis. The response is less than clamorous. In the event
the Nazi officer and his troops must be selected from the village
inhabitants. A number of hilarious scenes follow as the villagers
prepare for their exodus.
The villagers employ a linguist to teach them to speak the
German language. One of the trainees is struck by the resemblance
between German and Yiddish. The tutor reminds his students that
both languages are very similar--in fact German is Yiddish with
all traces of humour removed--one of the villagers then speculates
whether the Germans have declared war on them because the Jews
make fun of their language. In another scene a Jewish tailor requests
a villager simulate a fascist salute so that he can get the fitting
under the arm for his new Nazi uniform exactly right. At the same
time the spectre of Communism is in the air. The elder warns those
villagers whom he sends on assignments into other towns: "And
don't forget, don't come back a communist!" And his own reworking
of the Communist Manifesto comes down to "Men and
Women of the World unite!"--i.e., a sort of permanent orgy.
We follow the tribulations of the villagers as the train sets
off. The train is stalked by a band of Communist partisans who
are trying to blow up what they think is a Nazi train. After a
number of near misses the partisans finally intercept the stationary
train as the occupants descend to gather in a field--it is the
Sabbath! Peering through his binoculars the confused leader of
the partisans reports back to his chief by radio that he does
not know what to do--the German soldiers are swaying their bodies
back and forwards and saying prayers together with the deportees!
Under instructions from the chief the partisans call off their
mission. Above all, what makes all of the comic scenes work is
the immense affection and care with which Mihaileanu has recreated
the life and self deprecating humour of the Jewish villagers.
In the event the finale of the film makes clear that what we
have seen is merely a fantasy. For the occupants of the train
there can be no escape from the camps. At the same time the extent
of the horror of the Holocaust is laid bare: the elimination of
a vibrant, resourceful community with their dreams, loves and
plans for the future.
Radu Mihaileanu`s own parents were deportees (of itself, unfortunately,
no guarantee of truthful and artistic work) and he left Rumania
at the age of 22 to live and work in France. His first feature
film, Betrayed, is a variation of the Faust story concerning
a writer who, in order to write and publish, makes a deal with
the Rumanian Securitate secret police.
Mihaileanu, who was in attendance in Cottbus, explained that
he had the idea for his new film after seeing Schindler's List.
He was concerned about the growth of the ultra-right in Europe
and the way in which various forces were working to suppress further
discussion of the Holocaust. He declared his own aim to be: "Not
to banalise, not to rewrite but to keep the discussion going.
I wanted to depict the tragedy of the Holocaust using the language
of comedy, to use comedy to strengthen the tragedy. Laughter after
all is another form of crying."
In his use of humour Mihaileanu draws on a rich tradition of
Jewish ironic comedy. One particular inspiration, he said, was
the artist Chagall, who at the beginning of the century, enraged
established circle by daring to portray everyday farmyard animals--goats
and donkeys--in extravagant tones of red and blue.
In 1996 Mihaileanu sent his script to the Italian Roberto Benigni
and offered the latter the role of the fool in his film. Benigni
turned down the role to concentrate on his own film. In the meantime
Mihaileanu encountered considerable opposition to his own project
in France. Difficulties were encountered in finding financial
support. He was accused in turn of being an anti-Semite and an
historical revisionist. As a result a year was lost. Mihaileanu
is not prepared to be drawn on the issue of whether or not Benigni
stole his project. He declares merely that the two directors have
produced two very different films
One approaches such a film with trepidation. The director treads
perilous ground. I agree, however, with Mihaileanu's own assessment
that he and Benigni have made two very different films. In many
respects the humour of Mihaileanu's film is richer and more genuine.
It centres not so much on the comic qualities of the actor Benigni
and entourage but on the warmth, self-mocking humour and solidarity
of an entire people and its culture. And in the event Train
de Vie is the more tragic of the two films. Despite the death
of its main protagonist, Benigni´s film ends on a positive
note. Through cunning, resourcefulness and mutual love a couple
are able to rescue their child and survive the tribulations of
the camp.
Mihaileanu's film, on the other hand, makes patently clear
that for the vast majority of the victims there was no way out.
In becoming so intimately acquainted with the richness and warmth
of the Jewish community, we also get a glimpse of what was lost
in the Holocaust. In the film the bald and horrifying statistic
of six million victims acquires flesh and blood and that is in
itself a considerable artistic achievement.
See Also:
A review of recent east European cinema:
Film festival in Cottbus, Germany, November 11-15, 1998
[24 November 1998]
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