The WWII Film 'The Zone of Interest' is the U.K.'s International Oscar Submission
The trailer for A24's The Zone of Interest finally arrived months after the film debuted at the Cannes Film Festival and took home the Grand Prix and the FIPRESCI Prize. The World War II Holocaust film opened to rapturous reviews in France last spring, with reviews calling it "a portrait of the perpetrators" and a view of the Holocaust as it has never been seen. The film is billed as "loosely based on" the late Martin Amis' 2014 novel of the same name, a fictionalized love triangle set among the commanding officers at the Auschwitz concentration camp. However, reviews suggest it is less about the fictionalized story than a portrait of the real people the story it was based on.
Amis' The Zone of Interest is about Angelus Thomsen, the officer; Paul Doll, the commandant; and Hannah Doll, the wife of Paul Doll. The latter two were fictionalized versions of the actual commandant of Auschwitz during this period, Rudolf Höss, and his wife Hedwig, who lived in a palatial estate just outside the walls of the infamous camp. The film removes the false names and focuses more on the home life of the Hösses and the massive amounts of denial they live in as they build a perfect family home next door to a mass murder site.
The trailer arrives only a few weeks after the U.K.'s British Film Institute announced The Zone of Interest would be the country's submission for the International Academy Award category. A film made by American company A24 and starring an all-German cast may sound like a strange submission; however, the movie was co-produced by Film4, Channel4's big-budget studio arm. Moreover, to be eligible, the film must be co-produced by a British company and predominantly filmed in a non-English language. The Zone Of Interest is mainly in German and Polish and was shot on location in Poland.