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Europa Europa

 
Movies:

Europa, Europa

  • Director: Agnieszka Holland
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Tragi-comedy, Coming-of-Age
  • Themes: Crimes Against Humanity, Assumed Identities, Totalitarian States
  • Main Cast: Marco Hofschneider, Julie Delpy, René Hofschneider, André Wilms, Piotr Kozlowski, Aschley Wanninger, Hanns Zischler
  • Release Year: 1991
  • Country: PL/DE/FR
  • Run Time: 115 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

This drama was based on the true story of a young German Jew who survived the Holocaust by falling in with the Nazis. Solomon Perel (Marco Hofschneider) is the son of a Jewish shoe salesman coming of age in Germany during the rise of Adolf Hitler. In 1938, a group of Nazis attack Solomon's family home; his sister is killed, and 13-year-old Solomon flees to Poland. Solomon winds up in an orphanage operated by Stalinist forces; when German forces storm Poland, Solomon's fluent German allows him to join the Nazis as a translator, posing as Josef Peters, an ethnic German. In time, "Peters" is made a member of the elite Hitler Youth, but since Solomon is circumcised, he can be easily revealed as a Jew, and he lives in constant fear that his secret will be discovered. Solomon's close calls include an attempted seduction by Robert Kellerman (André Wilms), a homosexual officer, and his relationship with Leni (Julie Delpy), a beautiful but violently anti-Semitic woman who wants to bear his child for the glory of the master race. Europa, Europa (shown in Europe as Hitlerjunge Salomon) also features the real Solomon Perel, who appears briefly as himself. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Review

Films such as Judgment at Nuremberg have chronicled the crisis of conscience that afflicted ordinary Germans after World War II; Europa, Europa, however, examines that crisis as it was brewing, from the viewpoint of a man who embodied the nation's schisms in particularly dramatic fashion. Polish director Agnieszka Holland exhibits a lightness of touch that befits the film's fact-based premise. Solomon Perel's life was so extraordinary that it speaks for itself. In the establishing scenes of Perel's prewar youth, newcomer Marco Hofschneider embodies all the gawky charm of carefree boyhood. As the film charts his character's masquerade as first a good little Communist, then a brave Nazi war hero, it paints his struggles as merely the conflicted loyalties and unavoidable compromises of adolescence given terrible new significance by history. With few exceptions, wartime atrocities are depicted matter-of-factly, leaving the audience to make its own judgment about Perel and the dumb luck and quick thinking that allowed him to survive, even flourish. From André Wilms as the gay actor-turned-Nazi officer who nurtures young Perel to the superb Julie Delpy as the Aryan girl whose willfulness and pique are elevated to manifest destiny under Hitler's rule, the large international cast brings to life the varied personal stories that are sometimes missing from the history books. ~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide

Cast

  • Marco Hofschneider - Young Solomon Perel
  • Julie Delpy - Leni
  • René Hofschneider - Isaac Perel
  • André Wilms - Robert Kellerman
  • Piotr Kozlowski - David Perel
  • Aschley Wanninger - Eric
  • Hanns Zischler - Captain von Lereneau
Klaus Kowatsch - Soldier Schultz; Delphine Forest - Inna Moisievna; Jorg Schnass - Pfeiffer; Nathalie Schmidt - Basia; Klaus Abramowsky - Solly's Father; Aleksy Awdiejew - Soviet Major; Wolfgang Bathke - Police Officer; Martin Maria Blau - Ullmayer; Michele Gleizer - Solly's Mother; Bernhard Howe - Feldwebel; Holger Hunkel - Kramer; Andrzej Mastalerz - Zenek; Solomon Perel - Himself; Wlodzimierz Press - Stalin's Son; Marta Sandrowicz - Bertha; Boguslawa Schubert; Eric Schwarz - Goethke; Norbert Schwarz - Schwabe; Anna Seniuk - Rosemarie; Ashley Wanninger - Gerd; Cezary Morawski; Halina Labornarska - Leni's Mother; Artur Barcis; Jaroslaw Gruda; Ryszard Pietruski; Wlodzimierz Musial; Alexandr Maslov; Aleksander Bednarz; Holger Kunkel - Wagner; Zbigniew Bielski; Marcin Bielawski; Marek Brand; Arkadiusz Brukner; Dariusz Buchowiecki; Bohdan Ejmont; Alfred Freudenheim; Jaroslaw Gajewski; Kama Kowalewska; Herman Larcher; Marcin Latallo; Gienadij Lesniewski; Nicolas Lormeau; Michel Malko; Maxime Mardoukhaev; Hanna Sylberg; Tadeusz Wojtych; Grzegorz Wons; Stanislaw Zatloka

Credit

Margot Capelier - Casting, Marie-Christine Lafosse - Casting, Sarah Thomsen - Casting, Wiesa Starska - Costume Designer, Malgorzata Stefaniak - Costume Designer, Krystyna Grochowicz - First Assistant Director, Jacek Schoen - First Assistant Director, Pawel Wierkowski - First Assistant Director, Agnieszka Holland - Director, Isabelle Lorente - Editor, Ewa Smal - Editor, Zbigniew Preisner - Composer (Music Score), Grazyna Kula - Makeup, Ewa Symko-Marczewska - Makeup, Allan Starski - Production Designer, Jacek Petrycki - Cinematographer, Jacek Zaleski - Cinematographer, Barbara Pec-Slesicka - Production Manager, Marek Skladonowski - Production Manager, Arthur Brauner - Producer, Margaret Menegoz - Producer, Janusz Morgenstern - Producer, Lew Rywin - Producer, Hans-Dieter Schwarz - Sound Mixer, Elisabeth Mondi - Sound/Sound Designer, Malgorzata Jaworska - Sound Editor, Jacek Jelinski - Stunts, Zbigniew Modej - Stunts, Paul Hengge - Screenwriter, Agnieszka Holland - Screenwriter, Henryk Jedynak - First Assistant Camera, Jan Ossowski - First Assistant Camera, Roman Taborski - Gaffer, Michal Friedman - Historical Consultant, Leszek Szarota - Historical Consultant, Tadeusz Janowski - Properties Master, Emil Kostecki - Properties Master, Bogdan Piotrowski - Properties Master, Kazimierz Stys - Properties Master, Renata Pajchel - Still Photographer, Christina Undritz - Supervising Producer, Solomon Perel - Book Author

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Wikipedia: Europa Europa
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Europa Europa

Europa Europa DVD cover
Directed by Agnieszka Holland
Produced by Artur Brauner
Margaret Ménégoz
Written by Agnieszka Holland
Paul Hengge (additional material)
Starring Solomon Perel
Marco Hofschneider
Julie Delpy
Release date(s) France:
14 November 1990
Germany:
28 June 1991
United States:
28 June 1991 (limited)
Poland:
7 February 1992
Australia:
16 April 1992
Running time 112 min.
Language German
Russian
Polish
Hebrew
Gross revenue $5,575,738 (domestic) [1]

Europa Europa is a 1990 German language film directed by Agnieszka Holland. Its original German title is Hitlerjunge Salomon, which means Hitler Youth Salomon. It is based on the 1989 autobiography by Solomon Perel, a Jew who escaped persecution by the Nazis by masquerading as an Aryan. The film stars Marco Hofschneider and Julie Delpy, along with the real-life Perel as himself. The film is an international co-production between companies in Germany, France and Poland.

The film should not be confused with the 1991 Lars von Trier film Europa, which was initially released as Zentropa in the United States to avoid such a confusion.

Contents

Plot

Solek (a nickname for Solomon, also called "Solly") and his family live in Germany. On the eve of Solek's bar mitzvah, Kristallnacht occurs. His sister is killed and he, his parents, and two brothers, David and Isaak, move to Lodz, Poland, believing they will be safer there. When the Germans attack Poland during the September Campaign, Solek and his brother Isaak are sent East to the areas occupied by Soviet Union. The brothers are separated, and Solek is placed in a Soviet orphanage in Grodno.

Solek lives in the orphanage for two years, where he rises to become a Komsomol. One scene features a Russian language version of the German Communist classic song Dem Morgenrot Entgegen before mail call, where Solek receives a letter from his parents who have been re-settled in a ghetto. When the Germans attack the Soviet Union during Operation Barbarossa, the orphans flee, and Solek is separated from the others. He is picked up by German soldiers, convinces them he is a member of a German-speaking minority outside Germany, and is able to make himself useful to them as an interpreter, thanks to his command of German and Russian. He identifies Stalin's son, Yakov Dzhugashvili, who is captured at the same time by the Germans. He pretends to be a German named Josef "Jupp" Peters, and says that his parents came from Latvia and that he grew up in a German community in Poland. Later, a fellow soldier, a gay man named Robert, discovers the truth but promises not to tell anyone. The two become friends. After Robert and two other comrades are killed in combat, Solek attempts to desert to the Soviet side. However, as he is attempting to surrender, he realizes he has been followed by fellow German soldiers who then command the Soviets to surrender. Solek, again as Josef, is seen as a war hero. This allows him to leave the front and go to an elite Hitler Youth school after his captain, a nobleman from Pomerania, offers to adopt him. On the train, after realizing he shares a birthday and many physical similarities with Hitler, the woman escorting him begins making physical and sexual advances at Solek. Finally, after a ticket check, they begin having sex, with the woman moaning and yelling "Mein Führer!!".

At the school, Josef's face is measured for racial purity with calipers, and is found to be of "Aryan stock", although he is in fact Jewish. On one occasion, a doctor visits the school to perform a health examination, and when Solek learns that he would have to undergo the exam naked, he pretends to have a violent toothache to avoid revealing his circumcision and Jewish identity. Solek falls in love with a German girl called Leni, a fervent Nazi who lost her father in the war. But he must accept that their love has no future because he is circumcised and can't be intimate with Leni without revealing his secret. The two argue after Solek reacts to a particularly antisemitic remark by Leni, who calls him a Schlappschwanz (limp-dick). After several months without seeing her, Solek visits her mother, who has no love for the Nazis and who tells him Leni is pregnant and intends to "give the child to the Führer". Solek soon realizes that the father of the child must be his best friend Gerd, a fellow Hitler Youth classmate. When Leni's mother presses Josef on his identity, he breaks down and confesses that he is a Jew; she promises not to betray him. Leni never finds out.

Josef is called to a police station to clear up an issue with his papers. He produces everything except the Certificate of Racial Purity, which he says is still in Grodno; the commander says he will send for it at once to stop it from falling into Russian hands should the city be taken. As Josef leaves the building, it is bombed; Gerd, who was waiting for him outside, is killed by falling rubble.

The Hitler Youth at the school are sent to the front to defend Berlin. There Solek manages to surrender to the Red Army, with whom he can speak Russian. His captors refuse to believe that he is a Jew, not a German. "If you're a Jew, why don't you look like this? Look!", demands a Russian officer as he forces Solek to look at photos of murdered Jews from the death camps they had liberated. They are about to have Solek shot by an elderly Communist political prisoner (wearing a red triangle on his camp uniform) when Solek's brother Isaak, just released from a concentration camp, identifies Solek and saves him. He is released shortly thereafter and emigrates to the British Mandate of Palestine, the future State of Israel, where he proudly embraces his Jewish heritage.

Box office

The film was released on June 28, 1991 and grossed $31,433 in its opening weekend in two theaters. Its final grossing in the US was $5,575,738.[1]

Awards

The film won the Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film and was nominated for the Academy Award: Best Writing Adapted Screenplay.

Cast

Actor Role
Marco Hofschneider Young Solomon Perel
Julie Delpy Leni
René Hofschneider Isaak
Piotr Kozlowski David
André Wilms Soldier Robert Kellerman
Ashley Wanninger Gerd
Halina Labonarska Leni's Mom
Klaus Abramowsky Solomon's Dad
Michèle Gleizer Solomon's Mom
Marta Sandrowicz Bertha
Nathalie Schmidt Basia
Delphine Forest Inna
Martin Maria Blau Ulmayer
Andrzej Mastalerz Zenek
Solomon Perel Himself

References

External links

Awards and achievements
Preceded by
Cyrano de Bergerac
Golden Globe for Best Foreign Language Film
1992
Succeeded by
Indochine

 
 
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