In Another Lifetime

In the chaotic final days of World War II, a group of Hungarian Jews is on a forced march towards the Mauthausen concentration camp. Reaching a sleepy Austrian village, the 19 starving and exhausted men and women are locked in the barn of a surly farmer and his sullen wife (Revanche’s Johannes Krisch and Ursula Strauss). When one of the captives, a half-mad Budapest opera singer, proposes staging a Strauss operetta for the locals, everyone suddenly begins to cling to a very slender reed of hope. In this Holocaust period piece, based on a play by screenwriters Silke Hassler and Peter Turrini, Austrian journalist and documentary filmmaker Elisabeth Scharang does something remarkable: She strips away virtually all artifice, instead utilizing real locations illuminated by the naturalistic, almost vérité camera work of Jean-Claude Larrieu (Elegy). Scharang achieves a bittersweet, fable-like tone throughout, meanwhile ratcheting up the suspense as the farmer and his wife slowly rediscover their humanity in the joy of music shared with their Hungarian prisoners, and dark outside forces threaten to stop the show before it starts. In Another Lifetime’s culminating shot - a 60-year flash-forward that simply frames the face of a supporting character- is an astonishing image that will haunt the viewer long afterward.
Director(s)
Country(ies)
Language(s)
Release Year
Festival Year(s)
Running Time
94
Writer(s)
Cinematographer(s)
Editor(s)
Cast