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The Pianist I recently heard someone say that he didn't like Roman Polanski's "The Pianist" because the hero just sat around for four years growing a beard and peeling potatoes. Boring. Aside from the fact that many things of great interest happen in "The Pianist" (including the disastrous Warsaw Uprising), I think this person sounds like he wishes it were more of a Hollywood type action adventure film. Polanski made a point of not telling an action adventure story.. He was responding to films like "Schindler's List" which, in his view, propagated the lie that good people were able or willing to heroically oppose the Nazis where they could. I guess he would argue that certainly some remarkable-- really remarkable-- individuals opposed the Nazis and were active in the underground, but the reality was that these people were very few in number and had no real impact.
His "truth", that he wished to convey in "The
Pianist", was that for most Jews, the reality was that they were swept up by a
massive force and that the survival of any of them was more due to fortuitous circumstance
and luck than the moral acts of any individual. That's why Szpilman doesn't
"act"-- he reacts, and struggles to survive. It is also Polanski's own story-- he was separated from his family at the age of 10 and survived by his wits, and good luck. Who are you going to believe? Polanski or Spielberg? I didn't find it boring at all. I did find "Schindler's List" offensive because Spielberg had so much contempt for reality that he took an amazing true story and changed it to make it more "Hollywood"-- and preposterous. He couldn't bear to stick to the known facts. He had to clobber you over the head with sentimentality to be sure that you had the "right" feelings about everything. The audience walks out "feeling good about feeling bad". They liked Schindler. Liking Schindler is a reflection of your good taste. If a party like the Nazis rose up again, they would be sure to choose the right side!
Of what value a heroic tale that isn't true? Is it "essentially" true? How essential is it, that, in reality, nobody quite understood Mr. Schindler or what his exact attitudes and beliefs were? His own wife thought he was an asshole. Spielberg didn't know what to do with that information. He should have shown us that sometimes "assholes" do more good than pious preachers. Copyright © 2003 Bill Van Dyk All rights reserved. |
April 20, 2003 |
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