Musíme si pomáhat (2000)

reviewed by
Robin Clifford


"Divided We Fall"

Another comedy about the Holocaust? It took some the film-going populace a while to accept the popularity of Roberto Benigni's heartwarming tale about a father and son in a Nazi concentration camp in "Life Is Beautiful." Now, Czech filmmakers Jan Hrebejk and Petr Jarchovsky take a similar theme and go the black comedy route in a story about a couple in a small, occupied town who make the dangerous decision to hide an escaped Jewish prisoner in "Divided We Fall."

Josef (Boleslav Polivka) and Marie Cizek (Anna Siskova) are a childless couple who are trying to live a normal life in the face of his sterility and the occupation of their small town by the German army. One night, Josef meets the son, David Weiner (Csonger Kassai), of his former, Jewish employer and learns that the young man is the sole survivor of his family. He escaped from a concentration camp and returned home to collect some hidden jewelry before trying to escape his own certain death.

Josef makes the snap decision to hide the frightened refugee, opening himself and Marie up to danger as they try to balance their humanitarian deed with survival under the Nazis. Complicating matters are the frequent, unexpected visits by Josef's former colleague and, now, Nazi collaborator, Horst Prohazka (Jaroslav Dusek), a slimy toady who openly lusts after Marie. The couple must maintain a semblance of normalcy to keep their secret hidden and Josef decides to go to work for Horst to cover their tracks.

This doesn't sound like comedy and "Divided We Fall" is far from being a ha-ha funny film, but the dark humor the filmmakers inject into this survival tale help to take the edge off the subject dourness. Think of this as the reverse of "The Diary of Anne Frank," where the focus is on the couple hiding the refugee. David is symbolic in several ways: as a friend and neighbor in need; as the child the couple could never have; and, he is the Christ-figure as he "sacrifices" himself to father a child with Marie, an act that will, in the end, save them all.

While Boleslav Polivka and Anna Siskova are fine as the couple, and Csonger Kassai looks the part of the repressed, innocent Jew, there is one perf that surpasses them all. Jaroslav Dusek stands out as Horst, the oily, overbearing Nazi collaborator who hitches his future on the tail of the conquerors. With his severely clipped moustache and the little hair he has on his balding pate combed over, a la Adolph himself, and his pudgy body, he personifies the collaborating bureaucrat - he is, at once, menacing and comical. His is an outstanding perf.

The look of the film, with slight sepia overtones, is in keeping with the period it depicts. The budget is obviously small and the filmmakers make do with limited use of props and costumes - there are no marching hordes or massive air raids shown here. Sets and costume are simple and to the point.

"Divide We Fall" doesn't have the impact of "Life Is Beautiful" or the power of "The Diary of Anne Frank." It is an interesting character study and gives us a glimpse into the limbo world of an occupied town during war, but it never grabs your heart like those other movies. I give it a C+.

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