Filmmaker Ari Folman is well-known for his remarkable, award-winning animated anti-war feature film, Waltz with Bashir (2008) which was extremely critical of the First Lebanon War (1982-2000), in which he was personally involved. Also using the animated style, his latest film entitled Where is Anne Frank, based on the iconic Diary of Anne Frank -- and later literature about her death and the death of her sister-- is a brilliant, provocative and controversial film.
The story, which mixes past and present, revolves around Kitty, Anne’s imaginary friend, to whom she writes her diary. On a stormy night, the glass case where the famous diary is kept is suddenly smashed and a figure emerges from the ink on the hand-written pages – the figure of Kitty. Kitty is a spunky young girl, who is looking for her friend, Anne. On the one hand, she finds evidence of her everywhere – the Anne Frank House, a bridge named for her, a theater in her memory. But nowhere does she find anything that offers a true memorial to Anne’s values and life. Where is compassion? Where are the people working to save the refugee children who are facing deportation?
I had the chance to view the Hebrew dubbed version at the Jewish
Film Festival of the Jerusalem Cinematheque, this week. Ari Folman and some members of the voice-over
cast were present at the screening.
Folman talked about the importance of creating a culturally sensitive
version of the film for Hebrew-speaking audiences--much of the English script
was loosely translated into a contemporary and relevant Hebrew for viewers in
Israel. Kitty too is updated when she
goes through a makeover and comes out as a chic girl, with trendy clothes and
lots of style.
Folman also said that the film combines the past and the present: the Holocaust story known by audiences already, and the Kitty story, which
represents the transition to the contemporary period and to the issues of today,
especially vis a vis the need to help refugees and asylum seekers survive in
the face of so much evil and apathy within contemporary society, both in Israel
and abroad. When asked about the
delicate balance between past and present that this film endeavors to deal
with, Folman said that it was probably 40% past and 60% present, which tells
you where his real focus lies.
Many people within the Jewish community might be surprised by the
attempt to liken the Holocaust to contemporary issues, such as today’s
refugees, as if it takes away from the meaning and message of the Holocaust for
our young people to learn about social responsibility today. Folman does not
dodge this issue. He clearly thinks that you can do both, that there can be a
particularistic as well as a universalistic message when learning about the
Holocaust.
This is an extremely creative, artistic and serious animated film,
highly recommended not only for children, which builds on an iconic story that
is already so well-known by people everywhere.
The genius of a filmmaker like Ari Folman is how he takes the viewer to
see the story through a contemporary lens where Holocaust denial,
anti-Semitism, racism and apathy towards refugees are all equally anathema,
especially for those who care about the legacy of Anne Frank. This is a controversial message, since many
people think that one cannot equate the Holocaust with anything. Folman, himself
the son of Holocaust survivors, does not exactly equate the Holocaust with what
is going on today with refugees. Rather, he is not afraid to communicate the
idea that refugees who are suffering—who have lost everything and have nothing,
as was the case with Jews during the Holocaust—must be saved and given a fair
chance to rebuild their lives. The bold hint is that Jews too could have been
saved during the Holocaust period as well if people had not been so apathetic.
This film is a remarkable production – the animation is vivid and
colorful, the Nazis are portrayed as ghoulish and scary, and the barking German
shepherds are reminiscent of the wild dogs in Waltz with Bashir.
The film has been recommended for 10 and up, but
knowing my grandchildren as I do, I would recommend it for 12 and up. Take a
look at the trailer of the original English-language version.
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