Film

Be social

  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Newsvine
  • Stumbleupon

The Counterfeiters: Blood Money

A morally ambiguous Holocaust tale of survival and collusion

By ELLA TAYLOR
Wednesday, February 20, 2008 - 5:28 pm

Near the beginning of The Counterfeiters, a fact-based Holocaust drama by Austrian filmmaker Stefan Ruzowitzky, we meet Jewish money forger and former jailbird Salomon Sorowitsch (brilliantly played by Karl Markovics), packing to flee Berlin in 1936 with a suitcase full of fake money. We know from an opening coda that Sorowitsch will survive the war, but for now his cockiness doesn't save him from arrest by an old nemesis, counterfeit inspector Friedrich Herzog (Devid Striesow). Herzog, himself a smooth operator who's ravenous for career advancement, soon resurfaces as a camp commandant, rescuing Sorowitsch from Mauthausen, where he's made himself useful painting flattering portraits of SS functionaries, and bringing him to the Sachsenhausen camp in Germany. There, sequestered in a relatively cushy laboratory with a select team of similarly skilled inmates brought in from other camps, Sorowitsch will oversee the mass production of fake dollars and pounds sterling, with which the Germans plan to flood the British and American economies and so bring them to ruin.

Jat Jurgen Olczyk © Beta Film GmbH, courtesy Sony Pictures Classics

International treasure

Sorowitsch is no hero, and when an Austrian filmmaker who makes no secret of the fact that his grandparents were Nazi sympathizers takes as his subject a Jewish shyster who survived the Holocaust by giving his captors what they wanted, is he a brave boy or a rotten apple falling unpleasantly close to his nation's tarnished tree?

Ruzowitzky is hardly the first director, Jewish or otherwise, to pry Holocaust cinema loose from its reverential focus on saintly Jewish victims trodden down by goose-stepping aggressors. From Schindler's List on through The Pianist, Downfall, and last year's Black Book, not to mention a host of documentaries, filmmakers on both sides of the Atlantic have moved to take the hero/villain equation out of the 20th century's worst nightmare. Ruzowitzky lives and works in a country known more for self-pity and prevarication than for remorseful introspection about its role in propping up the Third Reich. Still, it's a positive step that Austria submitted The Counterfeiters for 2007's Best Foreign Film Oscar (for which it is nominated), though I shudder to think what will be made of this admirably opaque movie in a country that kept former Wehrmacht officer Kurt Waldheim in office and tolerates right-wing extremists like Jorg Haider.

The Counterfeiters is based on a memoir by Adolf Burger (played in the movie by August Diehl), the lab's communist idealist, who makes no bones about his disgust for Sorowitsch's collusion with the equally crooked Herzog and advocates sabotaging the Nazi money-printing scheme. The movie plays like a sepia-toned realist drama whose purpose is to spring Sorowitsch from stereotype and expose him as a flawed, even damaged man torn between his Darwinian credo (adapt) and a fatherly desire to protect the weak. But The Counterfeiters is also peopled with types — the socialist rebel, the bourgeois Prussian banker striving to replicate his past status, the kindly kapo doctor trying to save lives even as he placates his masters, the sadistic Nazi underling who arbitrarily shoots to kill while his "enlightened" superior doles out favors. Shifty-eyed, hatchet-faced, and with an eye for comely German shiksas, Sorowitsch himself sails a touch too close for comfort to Nazi cartoons of the sex-obsessed criminal Yid. But Ruzowitzky means to humanize him, not make him likable, just as he means to show that Burger's impetuous rebellion places his comrades in danger for the sake of a principle that may or may not be worth upholding under such duress. What physical brutality there is in the movie is kept peripheral, in part to underscore the dreadful predicament of the lab workers (what must it have been like to live in such relative luxury while, all around them, inmates suffered and died under appalling conditions?), but also to muddy the waters for moviegoers accustomed to getting their Shoah stories in black and white.

At its best — and queasiest — The Counterfeiters asks disturbing questions more commonly found in the survivor literature of Primo Levi or Bruno Bettelheim than at the movies. Without resorting to the crassly relativist reversals in Paul Verhoeven's idiotic Black Book (treacherous resisters! sensitive Nazis! who knew?), Ruzowitzky quietly asks what counts as moral behavior under fascism, and whether or not one's first duty is to survive. Such questioning plagued Levi all his life, and it may take Germany and Austria down a rocky path: Last week, I read an op-ed by a German woman who suggested that her countrymen might want to look for more "positive" World War II role models than the leaders of the White Rose student resistance movement, who, like Burger, endangered the lives of their colleagues and ended up literally losing their heads.

In the end, The Counterfeiters caves to a heroic story of sorts, implying that appeasing the enemy only depletes the spirit, and dreaming up a penitent act for Sorowitsch that's unsupported by the evidence. But Ruzowitzky complicates the battle between pragmatism and idealism by facing up to the fact that the Nazi machine rode roughshod over the brave and the feckless alike, that survival in the camps was largely a matter of luck and stamina, and those who had it were left with crippling survivor's guilt. For all his literary acclaim, Levi battled repeated depression and is thought to have ended his own life, while Sally Sorowitsch reportedly thrived as an art forger in Argentina.


THE COUNTERFEITERS | Written and directed by STEFAN RUZOWITZKY, based on the book The Devil's Workshop by ADOLF BURGER | Produced by JOSEF AICHHOLZER, NINA BOHLMANN and BABETTE SCHRODER | Released by Sony Pictures Classics | Royal, Town Center 5

 

Lust in L.A.: Hot, Sticky & Bothered

By Dani Katz

Wondering why guys don't make the first move anymore, and notes on the pains and pleasures of threesomes

Zen and the Art of Cougar Hunting

By GENDY ALIMURUNG

Zen Kern's cougar class: life-coaching an evolving dating paradigm

Confessions of an Aspiring Kept Man: Is That a Cucumber in Your Shopping Cart?

By MATTHEW FLEISCHER

It's not easy trying to be cougar bait

Stick Figures: Cumin-Dusted Xinjiang Barbecue, at San Gabriel's 818

By Jonathan Gold

Northern China's favorite snack food

Dim Sum When the Sun Goes Down

By Jonathan Gold

In the night kitchen

Addiction: Buying the Cure at Passages Malibu (67)

By MARK GROUBERT
Wed, Jun 25, 6:00 pm

At upscale "rehab," all you need is faith. And $67,000 a month

Going Undercover at Impact House (46)

By MARK GROUBERT
Wed, Jun 25, 5:59 pm

Hardcore recovery

Lust in L.A.: Hot, Sticky & Bothered (31)

By Dani Katz
Wed, Jul 2, 5:00 pm

Wondering why guys don't make the first move anymore, and notes on the pains and pleasures of threesomes

Zen and the Art of Cougar Hunting (16)

By GENDY ALIMURUNG
Wed, Jul 2, 1:22 pm

Zen Kern's cougar class: life-coaching an evolving dating paradigm

Death of Raven, a Hollywood Beauty (40)

By CHRISTINE PELISEK
Wed, Jun 18, 6:00 pm

The city's noir streets made her the star of her own tragedy, then took it all away.

Hancock, America's Low-rent Superhero, Just in Time for the Recession

By ELLA TAYLOR
Wed, Jul 2, 7:12 pm

It's a bird... It's a plane... It's Superbum?

Movie Reviews: Gonzo, Tell No One, The Wackness

By L.A. Weekly Film Critics
Wed, Jul 2, 7:08 pm

Also, Diminished Capacity and Holding Trevor

WALL-E: Robots in Love

By ROBERT WILONSKY
Wed, Jun 25, 6:59 pm

Movie blasts off to the future by boldly going where every sci-fi film's gone before. And that's a good thing.

John Waters: The Trash Auteur Speaks Out — Way Out

By STEVEN MIKULAN
Wed, Jul 2, 12:00 pm

On gay marriage, the presidential race, the corrupting influence of irony and the release of his new 'Til Death Do Us Part DVD

Don Bachardy on Christopher Isherwood, the Man He Loved

By DAVID EHRENSTEIN
Wed, Jul 2, 7:14 pm

L.A. portrait artist remembers the author, 30 years his senior, with whom he shared a life

• Advertisement •

Blogs

Nikki Finke's Deadline Hollywood Daily

SAG Takes A Page From AMPTP Trade Ad
Sun, Jul 6, 1:59 pm

Catch of the Day

Wee the people
Sat, Jul 5, 1:22 pm

LA Daily

The Gay Marriage Wars: Wrong Ahmanson, Again!
Fri, Jul 4, 4:07 am

Play

4th of July Dance Club Picks
Thu, Jul 3, 2:46 pm

Style Council

Moth StorySLAM, Tangier, 7/1/08
Wed, Jul 2, 10:04 am

Slideshows

Nightranger at Club Hell and Sunset Strip Music Festival

Hot Hot Heat, Juliette Lewis, Digital Betty and creepy puppets

Magic Lantern, Sasqrotch and Warm Climate, Echo Curio, 7/2/08

The low-key Echo Park gallery and performance space is also currently showing a collection of stencil art

We Are Scientists, Morning Benders and Blood Arm, El Rey, 7/1/08

It's a new wave revival as the band kicks off their US tour with a strong set from their new album

Chris & Don: Opposites Attract

By ERNEST HARDY
Wed, Jul 2, 7:16 pm

New documentary paints a portrait of the artist as a young man (and his lover as an old one)

Don Bachardy on Christopher Isherwood, the Man He Loved

By DAVID EHRENSTEIN
Wed, Jul 2, 7:14 pm

L.A. portrait artist remembers the author, 30 years his senior, with whom he shared a life

Hancock, America's Low-rent Superhero, Just in Time for the Recession

By ELLA TAYLOR
Wed, Jul 2, 7:12 pm

It's a bird... It's a plane... It's Superbum?

One From the Heart: Outfest Achievement Award Winner Donna Deitch

By ERNEST HARDY
Wed, Jul 2, 7:10 pm

Director shoots from the hip about the Hollywood gender gap and the soon-to-be sequel to her most famous film

Violence Is Golden: Timur Bekmambetov's Wanted

By ELLA TAYLOR
Wed, Jun 25, 7:00 pm

Director's stock rises with action-movie fans

Hancock, America's Low-rent Superhero, Just in Time for the Recession

Wed, Jul 2, 7:12 pm

It's a bird... It's a plane... It's Superbum?

Violence Is Golden: Timur Bekmambetov's Wanted

Wed, Jun 25, 7:00 pm

Director's stock rises with action-movie fans

Kit Kittredge: As American As Overpriced Dolls

Wed, Jun 18, 6:00 pm

In Mattel co-production, all it takes to cure the Depression is a little Miss Sunshine

Misspent Spoof: The Love Guru

Wed, Jun 18, 5:59 pm

Mike Myers' cosmic goof

Warrior King: Sergei Bodrov

Wed, Jun 11, 6:15 pm

Mongol director retraces the footsteps of Genghis Khan, navigates the Hollywood battlefield

LA Weekly Promotions

Summer Concert Guide

Find the hottest concerts and festivals this summer in the LA Weekly's Summer Concert Guide.

Opportunity Rocks Career Fair

Be the first to hear about the latest career opportunities. Click here to find your dream job!

Little Sexy Black Book

Bring sexy back with LA Weekly's guide to the sexiest spots in Los Angeles.

Living Quarters

Get the real story on LA real estate. Whether you're a renter, a buyer or a seller, Living Quarters is your guide to LA living.

Education Guide

From online learning to 4-year colleges, LA Weekly's Education Guide '08 has answers to all your education questions.

Blank Blankly

Speak Freely at LA Weekly with your own Blank Blankly slogan. Consider Thoroughly, then Create Adverbially only at LA Weekly.

Career Guide

Jumpstart your career with the LA Weekly Career Guide. All the info you need to take the next step in life.

Digital Jukebox

Be. Hear. Now. Listen to the hottest bands and stay on the leading edge of LA's music scene with free streaming music from LA Weekly.

Hook Me Up

Want FREE stuff? Sign up for this week's contests and get the hook-up from LA Weekly.

Insiders

Get Inside with LA Weekly. LA Weekly Insiders has the what to do and where to go in LA. Sign up and we'll deliver Insiders right to your inbox!

LA to Vegas

What happens there starts here. LA to Vegas is your guide to living it up in Sin City.

Jonathan Gold Text Alerts

Get Jonathan Gold's restaurant picks sent right to your phone and never miss another great meal!

Restaurant Gallery

Hungry? Check out LA Weekly's Restaurant Gallery advertorial for the best grub in LA.
Backpage.com