Austerlitz 2016

Directed by Sergei Loznitsa

How should we remember the Holocaust? As tourists visit Nazi death camps in increasing numbers, Sergei Loznitsa sets up his camera at Sachsenhausen and Dachau and simply observes the behaviour of the visitors.

Germany In English, German and Spanish with English subtitles
94 minutes B&W / DCP
E

Director/Producer/ Screenplay

Photography

Sergei Loznitsa
,
Jesse Mazuch

Editor

Danielius Kokanauskis

Festivals

Venice
,
Amsterdam Documentary 2016

Elsewhere

In Austerlitz, Ukrainian filmmaker Sergei Loznitsa (Maïdan, The Event), surely the world’s foremost documentarian of crowds, watches wave after wave of tourists traipsing through former Nazi extermination camps. Loznitsa filmed principally in Sachsenhausen, 18 miles from Berlin, where more than 30,000 prisoners died during World War II. Decked for a summer day trip in t-shirts and cargo shorts, the tourists throng past the surviving machinery of genocide. We see them looking for somewhere to have lunch, or posing for selfies against the “ARBEIT MACHT FREI” sign on the gate. We hear snatches of the docents’ scrupulously rehearsed commentaries and from time to time see a visitor absorbed in thought.

That’s pretty much it: Loznitsa simply placed his static camera in full view of his camera-toting subjects and filmed. The effect is not simple at all, a storm of perplexing questions about our capacity to process the horrors of which humanity is so dreadfully capable. The title, with its hint of Auschwitz, alludes to the W.G. Sebald novel of the same name, which also concerns the interrogation of historical evidence for living meaning.

“If the filmmaker’s position stands out as disturbingly bold, in a ‘genre’ that hasn’t experimented since Claude Lanzmann’s monumental Shoah (1985), the director approaches the Holocaust through non-fiction as no one has done before. In each scene the architecture remains always in focus, the only framed object maintaining an aura of dignity. We’re nailed to the screen for an hour and a half, watching apparently meaningless images. It is precisely in this contrast – the historic evidence of the place and the impossibility of explaining it – that the deepest meaning may be found.” — Clara Miranda Scherffig, Fandor

Loznitsa’s new feature, A Gentle Creature, also screens at NZIFF.