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SummaryFateless is based on the moving and disturbing novel by 2002 Nobel Prize winner Imre Kertész about a Hungarian Jewish boy's experiences in German concentration camps and his attempts to reconcile himself to those experiences after the war. (ThinkFilm)

Directed By:Lajos Koltai

Written By:Imre Kertész

Fateless

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must-see
87
User score
Mixed or Average
5.1
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Metascore
87
88% Positive
22 Reviews
12% Mixed
3 Reviews
0% Negative
0 Reviews
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100
Christian Science Monitor
This is a Holocaust movie that is so relentlessly observed and so aware of woe that it never feels like it belongs to a genre.
90
Washington Post
Koltai is an accomplished, Oscar-nominated cinematographer (for 2000's "Malena"), and Fateless is meticulously composed and shot.
90
The New York Times
It represents something stranger and, to those of us with only a secondhand or thirdhand knowledge of that history, more disturbing: a survivor's conviction that there were aspects of the experience itself that can only be described as beautiful.
88
Chicago Tribune
It's a work that sears the heart and conscience. The events are annihilating, the way they're told both beautiful and terrifying.
75
Miami Herald
The film never lacks dignity. Fateless doesn't look at life at the camp like Roberto Benigni did in "Life is Beautiful."
60
Chicago Reader
Long, heavy, and not particularly edifying Holocaust drama.
See All 25 Critic Reviews
User score
Mixed or Average
5.1
44% Positive
4 Ratings
22% Mixed
2 Ratings
33% Negative
3 Ratings
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Jan 20, 2019
10
howard16
There have been many films about the Holocaust but none quite as intimate and personal as Hungarian director Lajos Koltai's Fateless. Based on the semi-autobiographical novel by Nobel Prize winner Imre Kertesz, Fateless is a hauntingly beautiful film whose narrative unfolds in the form of miniature vignettes rather than peak dramatic moments. The film is seen from the perspective of 14-year-old Gyuri Koves (Marcell Nagy), who spent a year in Buchenwald during the last days of World War II and who provides the narration. Unlike most films about the holocaust, it stipulates that happiness and beauty can co-exist along with deprivation and despair. Marcell Nagy is outstanding as Gyuri, the young man who moves from a childlike innocence to world-weariness in the span of one year. With his soulful face and expressive eyes, he is almost a detached observer, quietly pondering his fate. He is, in the Sufi saying, in the world, but not of it and the film unfolds as in a lucid dream that blurs the lines between appearance and reality. Koltai captures this almost matter-of-fact quality as Gyuri says goodbye to his father (Janos Ban) who has been ordered to work in a **** labor camp. Because Hungarians did not feel the full brunt of **** persecution until the **** takeover in 1944, Gyuri thinks his father is just going to have to work hard and that nothing will happen to him. Neighbors and relatives who reassure him that everything will be all right do not further his grasp of reality. When the boy and his friends are detained on a bus on the way to work, he learns quickly that "his carefree childhood days are now over". Still not comprehending the magnitude of what is taking place, he is annoyed but not frightened and does not seize the opportunity to escape offered by a friendly cop. Even when he arrives at Auschwitz, he sits on the ground shaven and wearing a striped uniform, talking with friends as if he was in a school playground during recess. When Gyuri discovers that "he could be killed at any time, anywhere,” he attains a sort of spiritual freedom and his determination to survive is increased. Pretending to be sixteen, Gyuri escapes the gas chamber and is sent to Buchenwald and then to a smaller camp. The scenes of murder, death, and dying at the camps are thankfully left to the imagination and the film focuses on Gyuri's personal reactions to what he sees around him. Koltai, a cinematographer for twenty-five years, creates a visual cinematic poem in which his color palette is so muted that we experience the mud and the atmosphere of cold and gray almost viscerally. Sadly, we watch Gyuri's transformation from the confident teenager we saw at the beginning to an emaciated number, his leg so swollen and infected that he can barely walk. In voiceover, however, he talks about the hours between work and the evening meal as one of quiet reflection and about the joy in discovering a piece of meat or potato in his soup. He is also sustained by a friend he develops in fellow Hungarian Bandi Citrom (Aron Dimeny) who protects him and tries to teach him the skills of survival. Bandi, ever the optimist, proclaims, "I will walk down Nefelejcs Street again" One of the surprises in the film is the treatment Gyuri receives at what looks like a camp hospital. He is cleaned, allowed to sleep alone in a bed and taken care of, a set of circumstances not usually associated with extermination camps, yet based on Kertesz' actual experience. The most discussed aspect of the film, however, takes place in Budapest after the liberation. Gyuri feels more alone than he did at Buchenwald and even expresses a sort of homesickness for the camaraderie he felt at the camp. Friends and neighbors who were not in the camps cannot understand what it was truly like and Gyuri cannot explain it. Even if he could, no one really wants to hear anything that rattles their preconceptions. He rebels at playing the role of the victim and says, "there is nothing too unimaginable to endure". When asked about the atrocities, he talks of his happiness. "The next time I am asked", he says, "I ought to speak about that, the happiness of the concentration camp. If indeed I am asked. And provided I myself don't forget". His "happiness", according to Kertesz, who also wrote the screenplay, is not a form of denial but an act of rebellion against those who do not see him any longer as a human being, only as a victim. It was a way of assuring his responsibility, of defining his own fate rather than having others decide it for him. For me, it also added a portal into the sublime. GRADE: A
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  • Hungarian Motion Picture Ltd.
  • Magic Media Inc.
  • EuroArts Entertainment
  • Renegade Films
  • Hungarian Television
  • Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk (MDR)
  • Cinema Soleil
  • Eurimages
  • Hungarian Historic Foundation
  • Ingenious Media
  • Israel Film Council
  • Medien- und Filmgesellschaft (MFG) Filmförderung Baden-Württemberg
  • Ministry of Education and Sport
  • Ministry of National Cultural Heritage
  • Mitteldeutsche Medienförderung (MDM)
  • Motion Picture Foundation of Hungary
  • Rabinovich Film Fund Cinema Project
  • Recanati Foundation
Jan 6, 2006
2 h 20 m
R
You can close your eyes. You can turn away. But you will never forget.
Ashland Independent Film Festival
• 3 Wins & 3 Nominations
European Film Awards
• 2 Nominations
Copenhagen International Film Festival
• 1 Win & 1 Nomination
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