
In The Zone of Interest, director Jonathan Glazer brings his audience on a journey of the despair and psychological frustration of the wartime era of the 1940s. The film is mind-boggling with tensions that will boil deep to its audience’s core. It is a portrait of a daring society during a tumultuous time where there are unexpected consequences.
The Zone of Interest is based on the novel of the same name written by Martim Amis, who died in May of 2023. The film focuses on a picturesque mansion near Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland, where Auschwitz camp commandant Rudolf Höss (played by Christian Friedel) lives with his wife Hedwig Höss (played by Sandra Huller) and their children. Their home setting is lovely and elaborate, but very nearby some of the worst atrocities in history are taking place. Rudolf finds his work rewarding, if not quite fulfilling. While many at the camp and around the world are suffering, the Höss family is living an idyllic life in their massive home.
The Zone of Interest builds its enthralling story and continuity by its fascinating cinematography and its realistic writing, both of which emphasize the shocking psychological direction the film takes place. The stressful direction of this film blew my mind and had me wondering how Rudolf could make the choices he made. The ball was in Rudolf’s court about how things will go forward, and history will judge his decisions harshly. The Zone of Interest is simply one of the best tension-filled films that I have seen in a long time.
The Zone of Interest made me realize how impactful having a powerful role in a tumultuous era can be. The life of the Höss family is one of both guilt and luxury—but do they belong in that setting? Rudolf’s frustration is felt throughout the film, and it is seen through Hedwig as well. But will they ever have a life where the harsh era is behind them? The Zone of Interest is absolutely gut-wrenching, and I was hooked on this one-of-a-kind experience.
The direction and plot of this film will lead audiences to assume that it will be all about war and political violence, but there is virtually none of that at all in the film. That era of war certainly had many political factors to it, though, and many of which play into the complicated questions that Rudolf must address. So what happens if Rudolf makes a wrong choice in his position of power? Will there ever be peace for their family or their country? Is Hedwig’s frustration temporary, or will she be frustrated all the time? The tensions in The Zone of Interest rise rapidly, and its hard answers can be found in its daring presentation. Four out of four stars for The Zone of Interest.