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The Zone of Interest

  • 2023
  • PG-13
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
134K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
944
262
The Zone of Interest (2023)
The commandant of Auschwitz, Rudolf Höss, and his wife Hedwig, strive to build a dream life for their family in a house and garden next to the camp.
Play trailer1:17
6 Videos
99+ Photos
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Auschwitz commandant Rudolf Höss and his wife Hedwig strive to build a dream life for their family in a house and garden beside the camp.Auschwitz commandant Rudolf Höss and his wife Hedwig strive to build a dream life for their family in a house and garden beside the camp.Auschwitz commandant Rudolf Höss and his wife Hedwig strive to build a dream life for their family in a house and garden beside the camp.

  • Director
    • Jonathan Glazer
  • Writers
    • Jonathan Glazer
    • Martin Amis
  • Stars
    • Christian Friedel
    • Sandra Hüller
    • Johann Karthaus
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    134K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    944
    262
    • Director
      • Jonathan Glazer
    • Writers
      • Jonathan Glazer
      • Martin Amis
    • Stars
      • Christian Friedel
      • Sandra Hüller
      • Johann Karthaus
    • 586User reviews
    • 323Critic reviews
    • 92Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 2 Oscars
      • 70 wins & 187 nominations total

    Videos6

    Official Trailer 2
    Trailer 1:17
    Official Trailer 2
    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:01
    Official Trailer
    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:01
    Official Trailer
    The Zone of Interest
    Trailer 1:17
    The Zone of Interest
    Oscars 2024 Best Picture Nominees
    Clip 1:42
    Oscars 2024 Best Picture Nominees
    The Zone Of Interest: Filming Zone (Featurette)
    Featurette 3:44
    The Zone Of Interest: Filming Zone (Featurette)
    The Zone Of Interest: The Making Of (Featurette)
    Featurette 2:49
    The Zone Of Interest: The Making Of (Featurette)

    Photos171

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    + 165
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    Top cast65

    Edit
    Christian Friedel
    Christian Friedel
    • Rudolf Höss
    Sandra Hüller
    Sandra Hüller
    • Hedwig Höss
    Johann Karthaus
    • Claus Höss
    Luis Noah Witte
    • Hans Höss
    Nele Ahrensmeier
    • Inge-Brigitt Höss
    Lilli Falk
    • Heideraud Höss
    Anastazja Drobniak
    • Annagret Höss
    Cecylia Pekala
    • Annagret Höss
    Kalman Wilson
    • Annagret Höss
    Medusa Knopf
    • Elfryda
    Max Beck
    Max Beck
    • Schwarzer
    Slava the Dog
    • Dilla
    • (as Slava)
    Andrey Isaev
    • Bronek
    Julia Babiarz
    • Young Polish Housemaid
    Stephanie Petrowitz
    • Sophie
    Martyna Poznanski
    • Marta
    Zuzanna Kobiela
    • Aniela
    Benjamin Utzerath
    • Fritz Sander, Topf & Sons
    • Director
      • Jonathan Glazer
    • Writers
      • Jonathan Glazer
      • Martin Amis
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews586

    7.3134.3K
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    Featured reviews

    7berndgeiling

    The Wall Of Ignorance

    Glazers movie is loosely based on Martin Amis' novel The Zone Of Interest, extracting just one aspect out of it, the so-called normal life of the Höss family, living next to Auschwitz Concentration Camp, which was under Höss' command. Their life is being shown in an almost documentary style, in absolutely realistic reconstruction of the historical setting. Everything about their home is so bluntly normal, average and pseudo idyllic that it would be even boring, if we weren't be aware of the concentration camp hell just behind the wall around their garden.

    What we don't see we're getting to hear on the background sound. While garden parties are being celebrated and children play at the pool side, we hear the barking of dogs, brutal shouting, the shooting, the permanent sound of industrial murder, as a constant reminder of the atrocities the family doesn't ever seem to notice.

    The banality of evil is based on ignoring the murderous Nazi reality all around.

    What we get to see sometimes are smoking chimneys and the smoke of incoming trains in the distance, transporting more victims to the gas chambers.

    The erasing horror is a result of Glazers concept of refusing any empathy and subjective involvement to the viewer, with disturbing effect, because we, unlike the Nazi family, are unable to suppress the obvious.

    For some this might be an unbearable patience test, for others it might raise the question of how much we're suppressing and ignoring nowadays to be able to continue our average daily life.
    8Xstal

    Gets Under the Skin...

    There's a house that looks and feels like any other, with a mother and her children who are brothers - and there's a wall around this plot, the other side people are not, and they will not get the chance, to rediscover. As the father is the commandant of death, responsible for taking their last breath, though he lives without a care, just like his wife who loves it there, and it's clear they're very proud, of their success. After all, you have to have a certain mind, to exterminate a race of humankind, and then live a normal life, without guilt, or strain, or strife, in a house, with a big wall, to hide behind.
    6ethanbresnett

    Impactful but drawn out

    The Zone of Interest takes a unique angle in approaching the Holocaust. Certainly an angle I haven't seen before in a film. This different approach gives the film a really sinister quality that frames the evils of the Holocaust in a new and terrifying way.

    It achieves this approach through stark juxtaposition. It compares the relatively banal, matter-of-fact homemaking of the Hoss family against the utterly horrendous tragedy being perpetrated just over their garden wall. By doing this, it is not an overly graphic or in your face film. Instead, the violence and evil is primarily heard and not seen, as the horrifying sounds of the camp constantly bleed into the Hoss family home. It is in this way that the film makes its mark. To have such tragedy and horror ignored by this family and their guests. To normalise the mass murder over the garden wall. The glib and matter of fact way it is treated by them all. That is where the horror lies.

    Whilst this is all a very effective way of framing the horrors of the Holocaust, I do think this film lacks any storytelling merit. There is no real plot to speak of, so once the point the film is making has been made it is easy to want it to be over so as not to sit with these evil characters and horrendous events for too long.

    Then again it is a tricky point because I think this is definitely a story worth telling. Looking at the Holocaust from this angle to understand how normalised it became to certain people is vital to reflect on, but I'm not sure if a feature film was necessary to convey this.

    So overall, I thoroughly appreciate what this film was doing and the angle it took. The direction is class in creating this juxtaposition and drilling this point home, but beyond it's core message there is nothing in this film to get stuck into. No real plot. No characters you want to understand or connect with. As a result it feels like it overextended itself as a film, but delivers it's message nonetheless.
    9Lomax343

    The Human Side of a Monster

    This is one of the most unsettling films I've seen in a very long time. Rudolf Hoess was the Kommandant of Auschwitz, and oversaw the murder of around three million people.

    At the same time, he was a devoted family man, who lived with his wife and children in a large house just outside the camp. The camp itself is hinted at but not seen. Instead, we see Hoess taking his children on picnics, boating trips and horse rides. His wife and her mother talk about how wonderful the garden is, oblivious to the sound of gun-shots and columns of smoke rising from the crematoria just beyond the garden wall.

    Christian Friedel's Hoess is nothing like Ralph Feinnes' Amon Goeth in Schindler's List. The latter radiated sadistic evil; the former is terrifyingly normal. He sees the running of a concentration camp as a job and nothing more; a series of practical problems to be overcome through hard work and organisation. The Hoess children seem terrifyingly well-adjusted as well. The worst that can be said of any of them is that one boy can be mean to his younger brother.

    There's no real plot. The only significant events are Hoess' wife becoming upset because her husband's transfer might lead to her losing her idyllic house and "idyllic" lifestyle; and Hoess' later re-appointment to Auschwitz. Thanks to that nice Mr Google, I can reveal that these events took place in November '43 and May '44. The film ends shortly afterwards. We see nothing of Hoess' trial or execution. Just a family man with an odd haircut.

    It's easy - all too easy, probably - to regard Hoess and his ilk as one-dimensional villains; evil in the way that Bond villains are evil, or Darth Vader is evil. Nothing to do with us at all. The Hoess we see here IS like us. He can oversee the deaths of thousands of people during the day (and off-screen), then come home to read bed-time stories.

    Nor are Hoess and his ilk firmly in the past. For all I know there are Israeli politicians and leaders of Hamas who think nothing of bombing their perceived enemies, yet who love their children and are loved in return.

    Towards the end of the film there's a scene shot in the Auschwitz of today - but even here expectations are defied. We see the early-morning cleaning shift arrive before it's opened to visitors. It's a place of horror, but there's still a need to sweep the floors and clean the windows. Why? It's a very human contradiction.

    The message of the film is simple but profound - and also terrifying. We're ordinary people, but so was Hoess, at least on one level. That thing we call civilisation is a wafer-thin veneer. If we don't look after it, we'll lose it.
    9evanston_dad

    Gave Me Chills

    This movie gave me the shivers in a big way.

    I don't even know how to articulate my thoughts on this film. I didn't really think it was possible to show me a story about the Holocaust that felt like something I hadn't already seen, but Jonathan Glazer manages to do just that with this film. I tried to read the Martin Amis novel this is based on and got almost all the way through it, but I bailed with about 50 or so pages to go. Just couldn't force myself through that last bit. But I read enough of it to know that the film is a very loose adaptation. It's more like Glazer took the general idea and then made his own story out of it.

    I had just watched "All the Light We Cannot See" shortly before seeing this film, and I was so irritated in that series that the Nazis were all portrayed as such cartoonish villains. Every single one was a ghoulish monster who monologued while terrorizing whoever they happened to be in the room with. My problem with that is that it makes the Nazis look like aberrations rather than as normal people who were somehow brainwashed into thinking that what they were doing was on the right side of history, so it's easy to dismiss the Holocaust as something that couldn't happen again. But in "The Zone of Interest," Glazer does the exact opposite. The Nazis in this are banal, ordinary people who tend their gardens, bicker about the things spouses bicker about, spend the day bathing in the river with their kids. It just so happens that literally outside their backyard is daily mass murder which they can conveniently ignore because it's out of sight. We hear the screams, gunshots, the trains bringing in fresh batches of people to be slaughtered, but we don't ever see it. The film creates a portrait of the most banal kind of evil, and it's hard for me to get my head around it.

    Christian Friedel and Sandra Huller give sensational performances as the commandant of Auschwitz and his pampered, spoiled wife. The film demands full attention from its audience, as frequently the most important thing happening on screen is happening in the background, or up in the far corner of the frame. We'll see a column of crematorium smoke hovering in the distance, or see some hazy ash floating by as the Nazis wander around their flower garden that they're so proud of.

    In the film's final moments, we get a glimpse of what might be a conscience in the commandant, a hint that he might not be as utterly indifferent to what he's doing as he appears throughout the rest of the film. It's a haunting scene to cap off a haunting movie.

    And can I just say that reading about the making of this film makes it all the more impressive. Everything happening on the other side of the concentration camp wall is visual effects projected onto green screens. Now those are the kinds of special effects that really impress me.

    Grade: A.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Hedwig tells her friends she got a coat from "Canada," mocking another woman who thought she meant the country. Kanada was the name given to Auschwitz's vast storehouse of goods confiscated from the prisoners.
    • Goofs
      His uniform rank was incorrect the entire movie. His rank is that of a Obersturmbannführer, and he was addressed as such a few times in the move. But his uniform rank insignia (collar and shoulder) was that of a Sturmbannführer, one rank lower.
    • Quotes

      Hedwig Höss: I could have my husband spread your ashes across the fields of Babice.

    • Crazy credits
      After the opening title card fades, the screen stays black for over two minutes
    • Connections
      Featured in 2024 EE BAFTA Film Awards (2024)
    • Soundtracks
      Chinesische Straßenserenade
      Written by Ludwig Seide

      Performed by students from the University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre & Dance

      Conducted by Oriol Sans

      Arranged by Members of the Auschwitz I Men's Orchestra

      Licensed with kind permission of Richard Birnbach GmbH & Co. KG & University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre & Dance

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    FAQ19

    • How long is The Zone of Interest?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 20, 2024 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Poland
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • A24 (United States)
      • Official Facebook
    • Languages
      • German
      • Yiddish
      • Polish
    • Also known as
      • Zona de interés
    • Filming locations
      • Auschwitz-Birkenau Concentration Camp, Oswiecim, Malopolskie, Poland
    • Production companies
      • A24
      • Access Entertainment
      • Film4
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $15,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $8,659,464
    • Gross worldwide
      • $52,631,884
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 45 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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