This
movie intrigued me as soon as I first heard about it, and as soon as I saw the
first trailer, I was 100% onboard and not-so-patiently waiting for it to come
to my general area. I finally had a chance to get down to the Cities and see
it, and it is just so, so good (premise spoilers.)
Jojo is a
10-year-old boy living in Nazi Germany toward the end of the war. A devoted
Hitler Youth, he believes every bit of propaganda his country has taught him
about Jews and daydreams about joining Hitler’s personal guard. When he
discovers a Jewish girl hidden in his attic, he takes it upon himself to write
a definitive guide on Jews but is perplexed when the girl, Elsa, isn’t as he
expects her to be.
I enjoyed
Thor: Ragnarok a lot, but even though
this is only the second Taika Waititi film I’ve seen, I get the sense that this
is much more undiluted Waititi. The film is so excellently put together, an
incredible mix of audacious humor, savage satire, and piercing drama. Waititi
knows just how far to push it with the jokes and when to pull back and get
real. The opening sequence, in which Jojo cheerily runs down the street
yelling, “Heil Hitler!” to passersby
while a German version of “I Want to Hold Your Hand” plays over Hitler
appearing at rallies to Beatlemania-esque shrieks, feels like such a succinct
depiction of what it was like to live in that place at that time.
This is
hardly the first film that looks at the horrors of the Nazis through the eyes
of a child, but the perspective we get here is really intriguing. As a young
boy, Jojo trusts what the adults in his life tell him, and everyone except his
mother is telling him that Jews are monsters, Hitler is somewhere between a
superhero and a god, and there’s no greater honor than dying in battle for the
Nazi cause. He doesn’t think of it as ideology – to him, it just is. It isn’t
until he actually comes face-to-face with a real live Jew that he starts to see
the cracks. It’s an interesting way to explore white supremacy and facism.
As Jojo,
young Roman Griffin Davis carries the film with surprisingly-steady shoulders,
and his peers Thomasin McKenzie (as Elsa) and Archie Yates (as Jojo’s friend
Yorki) also acquit themselves well. They’re surrounded by an able adult cast,
many of whom are asked to juggle both extremely-dark satire and earnest drama
and handle both deftly. I especially want to highlight Scarlett Johansson as
Jojo’s mom Rosie and Sam Rockwell as Hitler Youth instructor Captain K. And of
course, I can’t leave without mentioning Waititi’s own performance as the
imaginary Hitler in Jojo’s mind. In Waititi’s hands, imaginary-friend Hitler is
petulant, dumb, and ridiculous, but at the same time, he carries a menace that
flashes out when Jojo least expects it. Plus, there’s just something so
satisfying about a buffoonish Hitler being played by someone who’s both Jewish
and Maori.
Warnings
Strong
thematic elements, language (including anti-Semetic insults,) drinking/smoking,
violence, disturbing images, and irreverent humor about an intense subject.
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