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See “Hannah Arendt” for the Sukowa, If Not the Full Story

Hannah Arendt opens on July 19 in at Seven Gables Theatre.

Adolf Eichmann, reported political theorist Hannah Arendt for the New Yorker in 1963, was “thoughtless,” a boastful bureaucrat who said, “Officialese is my only language.” When Arendt said Eichmann couldn’t think, she explained that what she meant was: “think from the standpoint of somebody else.” In many ways, Arendt’s peculiar indictment of Eichmann — a man many believed to be the logistical force behind millions of death-camp murders — was, as befitted the author of The Origins of Totalitarianism, a critique of the social structures that permitted not just Eichmann but nearly all Germans not to imagine what was happening in those camps.

For Arendt, Eichmann was an edge case that demonstrated how normal people could not think about the Holocaust as it occurred. Here was a man whose job it was to know, and who nonetheless could, burying himself in the minutiae of genocide, feel no remorse as a consequence of his actions. He was, he said in the language of Nuremberg, just following orders. In at least one instance, Eichmann discovered one of the people he thought of as a “useful” Jew had been sent to a death camp. Though unwilling simply to free him — that would have meant challenging his superiors — Eichmann got the man a light work detail, sweeping a gravel path, feeling very contented with himself, although the man was killed just weeks later.

For her eponymous film, director Margarethe von Trotta worked again with Barbara Sukowa, who plays Arendt in middle age as bursting with intellectual and romantic fervor (her marriage to Axel Milberg’s Heinrich Blücher is a lusty fairytale), but with a hawkish dispossession, her eyes glinting as they fasten on Eichmann during his trial. She can hardly believe how feeble a thinker of any sort he is, this, the fabled Eichmann, and it’s this experience that prompts her to refocus on the “banality” of Eichmann’s evil. He is not heroic, a Faustian devil — he’s a mindless cog put to use by a warped ideology.

In the context of film as artwork, von Trotta’s major gesture is in the way that Martin Heidegger (Klaus Pohl) makes appearances throughout the film. Von Trotta doesn’t underline it in the American way of having Arendt deliver a subtextual monologue to Heidegger, but his presence is a counterpoint to her (salutary, I think) demolition of a cult of Eichmann. Heidegger, after all, was a German who could think, as Arendt knew from her relationship with him. And yet, there he had been, a newly minted Nazi Party member and rector of the University of Freiburg. Eichmann may have been on trial publicly, but it was Heidegger’s betrayal, von Trotta suggests, that weighed on Arendt’s mind.

The latter part of Von Trotta’s film turns on the blowback to Arendt’s incendiary article — it brought threats and cost her old friends. She’s berated for not having imagined, ironically enough, this eventuality. (It’s possible she meant it in a pedagogical way, but her discussion of the cooperation of Jewish councils with the Nazis was guaranteed to be inflammatory. If you can’t resist, Arendt wrote, you still have the option of doing nothing to help. That’s a strategic assessment, perhaps similar to the calculus on dealing with terrorist hijackers. But it sounded like victim-blaming.)

If you are not steeped in the era’s history, Hannah Arendt may feel like a Cliff’s Notes version, as arguments tend to be set up rather than developed. Minor characters come off as spokespeople doing walk-ons.

It’s possible to watch the film and feel Arendt was simply terribly put-upon, a frank academic who believed too strongly in the truth, rather than someone who made dubious claims in print about Eichmann’s “Zionism.” Von Trotta’s portrayal of the New Yorker staff also feels lightly mocking of their middlebrow concerns — they didn’t know what they were getting into. Poor William Shawn is always on the phone, checking on Arendt’s progress. (Eichmann’s trial began in April 1961. He was hanged end of May 1962. Arendt’s series didn’t run until February 1963.)

Von Trotta’s Arendt, honey-badger-like, cows Shawn with a few sharp words. But surely that truck colliding into Arendt’s taxi in Central Park in March of 1962 — she woke in the ambulance, with a number of broken ribs — also slowed her down. Von Trotta elides these kinds of things, just as Arendt did in her treatment of Eichmann, making a larger point. But in von Trotta’s case, this is a miscalculation. When all you hear at length is Arendt’s eloquent defenses, you’re robbed of much the drama of the actual debate.

“The Prey,” a Hyperactive Action-Thriller from France [Review]

Opening June 7 at Oak Tree 6: Director Eric Valette continues his efforts to keep you awake during French films with The Prey (La Proie), a film that asks the question, What would happen if The Fugitive was about a bank robber with the speed and reflexes of Jason Bourne? And what if he was trying to stop a murder before it took place, rather than prove his innocence?

Albert Dupontel plays Franck Adrien, who’s knocked over a bank for a cool two million euro (that’s 2.6 million U.S.!), and is trying to wait out his sentence without being killed in prison by an impatient partner (or Russians, because they will kill you, that’s how they are). Dupontel is credible as a mistrustful loner — though you do wonder where he mail-ordered his wife Anna (Caterina Murino) — and gives real flair to Franck’s improvisational moves once he’s on the run.

You understand why Franck has trust issues, once you (and he) find out that quiet cellmate who kept to himself was not the best person to give his home address to. Incredibly normal Jean-Louis Maurel (Stéphane Debac) is a serial killer with a thing for young girls. The Prey ups the cat-and-mouse between Franck and Jean-Louis by giving the Tommy Lee Jones part to Alice Taglioni, who plays superflic Claire Linné, in charge of a special police ops team and a little disgruntled at being pulled off big busts to deal with some lousy bank robber. (Robbing a bank? Is that even against the law still?)

Franck is never more than a half-step ahead of Claire, so a large part of the film is hair’s-breadth escapes; my favorite is the backyard-hedge run that summons up both Ferris Bueller and Cheever (remember the one about swimming pools?) while the village streets swarm with police cars and trucks. It does come to seem incredible that Franck could maintain that energy, given the blood loss, but who has time to worry over details when someone’s busting out of a third-story window?

This is a fantastic date movie for the action-movie fan, as right up until it starts, your companion will likely be impressed that you suggested a French film with subtitles. Once the prison shanks come out, obviously, they’re going to catch on.

In Farewell, My Queen, They Do Not Eat Cake

Farewell, My Queen, the new film from Benoît Jacquot, showing at Seven Gables in Seattle, is lush and atmospheric. Based on Chantal Thomas’s 2003 novel, it focuses on Marie Antoinette (played flawlessly by Diane Kruger) and her reader, Sidonie (a sultry and calculating Léa Seydoux), in the days immediately surrounding the build-up of the French Revolution and the storming of the Bastille.

At times the camera seems to become Sidonie, bouncing up and down as she weaves through the anxious crowd in the back quarters of Versailles. It follows her as she lounges in the palace gondola; as she reads the latest fashion magazines to the queen; as she attempts to wake the Duchess Gabrielle de Polignac (played with a series of withering glances and intense gazes by Virginie Ledoyen), the queen’s lover, who–incidentally–sleeps completely in the nude.

Kruger and Seydoux play their parts with such gravitas that Sidonie’s blind devotion to the queen makes sense: it is clearly Sidonie’s raison d’être. And Kruger’s Marie Antoinette is a fragile and complex woman, sometimes frivolous, sometimes sensible; utterly distraught, slightly tyrannical, helpless, determined.

Sidonie’s loyalty to the queen and desire to be close to her is only intensified by the news of the Revolution and the circulating hitlist. In attempting to ingratiate herself, Sidonie takes on a secret embroidery project for the queen, tries to anticipate what mood the queen will be in and what she’ll want to hear, and makes the ultimate sacrifice: acquiescing to risking her life by trading identities with the Duchess during an attempt to flee from Versailles.