February, 2020 Film Review: New Mexico Jewish Link
First Place, Reviews, New Mexico Press Women Awards 2021
In 2020, Jojo Rabbit, an anti-hate satire, was up for 6 academy awards in February, including Best Picture, and it won for Best Adapted Story. The film script is inspired by a novel, Christine Leunens’ Caging Skies, that in turn was based on a true story. That it won for Best Adapted Story is surprising, even ironic, as the way the movie ends is uplifting, whereas the novel becomes progressively darker. This begs the question: What serves us better, an inspiring story or one that hews closer to historic truth?
Jojo Rabbit is written and directed byTaika Waititi, who grew up in New Zealand with his mother, who told him about the book. Waititi’s father is Maori and his mother is of Russian Jewish and Irish descent. Perhaps this mixture gave him a more creatively flexible way of thinking.
What I hope is that Jewish people will go to see this film and bring their non-Jewish friends to see it. It is funny, it is poignant, and it delivers an important teaching. Those who despised Mel Brooks’ The Producers and who, understandably, cannot watch a film that satirizes Hitler, will probably not appreciate it. Nevertheless, it has sufficient merit that the Shoah Foundation approved it for their educational programs.
Claudia Ramirez Weideman, the foundation’s associate director of education technologies, explained to reporter PJ Grisar in the Feb. 26, 2020 Forward that, when they saw an early screening, “Everyone, I think, could see the enormous potential that the film could bring to promoting understanding around anti-Semitism, humanizing of ‘The Other,’ promoting empathy. . .”
The story begins by introducing Jojo, a 10-year-old German boy, with a friend who as the written script’s direction describes: “is none other than Jojo’s Imaginary Friend, Adolf Hitler. However, it’s not the Hitler we’re all used to, he’s imaginary and therefore can only know what Jojo knows.” Jojo is looking forward to spending the weekend with the Hitler Youth, where he is indoctrinated into hating Jewish people. This role, played by Waititi himself, did not exist in the original novel. It works throughout the film to show us the thrall that Hitler had over young people, and changes that Jojo’s character finally undergoes.
At the camp they chant “Horns / Serpent tongue / Fangs /Green blood / Claws, while their teacher proudly writes the children’s words on a blackboard. At the top of the board is the heading: “The Jew.” Later Jojo sits in his tent with his friend Yorki and fantasizes about catching a Jew.
Yorki, who is a bit less sanguine about the whole business, asks him, “But how would you know if you saw one?”
Jojo says, “Oh I’d know. I’d feel its head for horns. And they smell like Brussels Sprouts.
Yorki replies, deadpanning, “Oh yeah, I forgot about the Brussels Sprouts bit.”
Jojo, undeterred, says, “Imagine catching one and giving it to Hitler. That’d be a sure-fire way to get into his personal guard.”
Elsa is the heroine of the film
But Jojo gets seriously injured with a permanent scar to his face, and has to come home, only to discover that his mother Rosie, is hiding a Jewish teenager, Elsa, in their attic. Rosie is played with scintillating wit by Scarlett Johansson, who was nominated for Best Supporting Actress for her role. When Jojo stumbles across Elsa, instead of cowering, Elsa grabs Jojo by the neck and demands he tell her who she is, saying, “Yes. You know.”
Jojo gulps and futilely replies, “A Jew.”
“Gesundheit,” Elsa jokes, like he’d said ‘achoo.’
Elsa, played by the 19-year-old actress Thomasin McKenzie, is the pivotal star of the film in this viewer’s mind. Her courage and humor are transcendent, redeeming the film and providing a role model for those of us who have recently felt cowed by resurgence of anti-Semitism.
After his encounters with Elsa, Jojo runs back to his room where his ridiculous imaginary friend Adolf says “She’s pretty rude, y’know. That’s just my two pfennige.”
Jojo gets the idea to have Elsa draw him a book about Jews. He says, “So, I’d like you to draw a picture of where Jews live. A typical hive; where you all sleep, eat, and where the Queen Jew lays the eggs.”
Elsa replies, “You really are an idiot.”
Later Jojo’s mother Rosie goes up to the attic and says to Elsa, “How do you love a son like this, a kid who believes the things he does? In the end, you have no choice. I know he’s still in there somewhere, the little boy who loves to play and runs to you because he’s scared of thunder.”
Jojo visits Elsa again, and again she overpowers him, and says, “There are no weak Jews. I am descended from those who wrestle angels and kill giants. We were chosen by God. You were chosen by a pathetic little man who can’t even grow a full mustache.”
Jojo knows if he tells on Elsa, he would get her, his mother and himself killed as well. But what fun is it to have a secret if you can’t tell, a little? He goes and tells his Hitler Youth leader, Klenzendorf, who is now in the town, “I’m writing a book.”
Klenzendorf asks, “What’s it called?”
Jojo says, “‘Yoohoo Jew,’ It’s an exposé on Jews.”
Klenzendorf thinks this is hilarious. He shows Jojo his secret fashion drawings of uniforms dressed up with sequins and tassels. In this is an important educational point, the hint that Klezendorf, played by Sam Rockwell, is not really a Nazi, because, for a true fascist, everyone must conform; the uniform, the thinking, the style must be ‘just so.’
Later upstairs Elsa tries to tell Jojo, “You’re not a Nazi, Jojo. You’re a 10 year old kid who ‘likes’ swastikas and ‘likes’ dressing up in a funny uniform and wants to be part of a club. But you’re not one of them. Not you.”
I took a non-Jewish friend to see the film. Afterwards she asked me if I was disturbed by the anti-Semitic caricatures that Jojo made. I explained that the point was to show how infantile and ridiculous they were. Ridiculous but also tragic in their consequences. Many young people today don’t know about the Holocaust, that six million Jewish people, throughout all the towns and cities and villages of Europe, were hunted down and murdered.
Evil has a certain appeal. It is hard to understand, that appeal. But this film delivers a significant body blow to that evil. Sometimes by showing up evil, making it ridiculous, without letting our guard down, we can see it for what it is. In this way perhaps we are not doomed.
The ending (spoiler alert)
Unfortunately, even after Jojo becomes enamored of Elsa, it takes him almost to the end of the film to kick out his imaginary friend Adolf, to let go of his fanatical loyalty, when the Allies occupy the town. Elsa asks, Who won? Is it safe to go out? At first he says, no, the Germans, but then, tells her the truth and they go out. There the movie ends.
It is at this point that the book, Caging Skies, is only half-way through and takes a significant turn, as Leigh Monson pointed out in ‘Jojo Rabbit’ is One of the Strangest Adaptations Ever – Here’s How It Differs From the Book. The boy, in the book Johannes, doesn’t let go. He lies, he tells Elsa that the Germans won and he keeps her inside for himself for four more years until finally they turn on each other in hatred. This shows us the true dangers of indoctrination – it is a story that does not have a Hollywood finish.
The film ends with a quote from the German poet Rainer Maria Rilke,
“Let everything happen to you
Beauty and terror
Just keep going
No feeling is final.”
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