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| Williams as "Jakob the Liar." |
By Debbie Schlussel
http://www.jewishworldreview.com --
I HAVE A CONFESSION to make. Recently, I experimented with the latest product of a shameful industry. No, not porn. Though the experience did involve pictures --- moving pictures.
I saw the movie, “Jakob the Liar.”
Starring Robin Williams, the talkie is the most recent output in a multi-media industry that
has consumed not just Holywood, but large portions of the legal
industry, the publishing world, etc. I refer to what my cousin, Menasheh, a Holocaust survivor, has dubbed the “Holocaust Business.”
Of course, the Holocaust was a Jewish tragedy. It killed a sizeable part of my
family and many other Jewish families who descend from its Six Million
victims. (My maternal grandparents are Holocaust survivors and my mother
was actually born in the Bergen Belsen camp.) It was, likewise, a tragedy for the families
of the five million non-Jews who found a similar fate at the hands of Nazis. But it’s
embarrassing to witness my co-religionists, as well as Hollywood and
other institutions of popular culture, obsess on events that
spanned less than a decade. And it’s high time we stop pushing the
Holocaust on American consumers.
Sure, it’s important to remember the evil that man can do to his fellow, and, certainly, I believe in Santayana over-rehearsed adage that “He who forgets history is doomed to repeat it.” And, yes, President Franklin D. Roosevelt
knew precisely what was occuring at the concentration camps and could have
done more to stop the wholesale attempted extermination of an entire people.
Certainly, we should remember the Holocaust and recognize these horrible facts. But even given this, there is no reason why, it seems, every other movie, play, or book needs to focus on the Holocaust -- the level of which is beginning to border on the absurd.
People go to the movies to escape, for some enjoyment, entertainment. But, as “Jakob the Liar,” and before that, “Life is Beautiful,” has proven, the Holocaust obsession is so deep, you can’t even go see a so-called “comedy” at the movies anymore, without being stuck in a “Holocaust comedy.” Have we come to the point where, in order to have "our story" told, we are willing to have a tragedy trivialized and made ridiculous, complete with clowns and make-believe fantasies?
When I went to see a sneak preview of “Jakob the Liar,” it was in hope of finding
relaxation. Instead, not knowing the storyline, when the lights dimmed, I was greeted
with the proverbial Nazi guard towers, barbed wire, and yellow stars.
This boring, seemingly endless movie, centers on star Robin
William’s character, “Jakob,” who pretends to have a forbidden radio in a
Jewish Ghetto. The thesis of the comedic film is that sometimes it’s
necessary to pretend and lie to keep hope alive (a la “Life is Beautiful”).
But Williams’ “Jakob” doesn’t keep hope alive. In the end —and I’m not
spoiling a good movie for you, I’m saving you $8.00— suicides are committed
and characters die, including “Jakob,” because of Nazi anger over this
non-existent radio.
In the course of teaching us this non-lesson, the movie
managed to get everything in, from a rehash of Williams’ “Good Morning
Vietnam” radio hysterics complete with his repertoire of voices, to visions
of the Andrews Sisters.
So what was the point of this movie, other than
telling us that there was a Holocaust and it was bad — as if we didn’t know
that — and adding some comedy to the formula? What was the point other than
providing Williams with a potential opportunity to receive an undeserved Academy Award?
Seriously, why did Williams participate in this farce? Because these days one can make any movie, whether it has redeeming artistic worth or not, if it's about the Holocaust, it will be respected.
In Hollywood, it seems, you’ve really arrived when
you’ve starred in a Holocaust movie.
Holocaust films are virtually guaranteed Oscar considerations.
Don't believe me? Just ask Roberto Benigni and Liam Neeson. Did you ever hear of them before the hoopla surrounding “Life is Beautiful” and “Schindler’s List”? Didn't think so.
“Schindler’s List” was moving, poignant, and a cinematic high point. It
accurately and vividly depicted some of my grandfather’s own experiences during
the Holocaust. But “Life is Beautiful”? It’s no surprise that before “Life
is Beautiful,” Benigni’s biggest role was a rehash of the comedic, bumbling
Inspector Clouseau in 1993’s “Son of the Pink Panther.” The Holocaust is
not an Inspector Clouseau type of event, but Williams and Benigni have
managed to turn it into one.
How many "clown" Holocaust movies must we endure? Even comedian Jerry Lewis
has gotten in on the act. Actually, he pioneered this genre, starring in
and producing the 1972 film, “The Day the Clown Cried,” in which an actual
painted-face clown leads Jewish concentration camp kids into the gas
chambers.
Oh, the movie was never released. In those days -- way, way back in the 70s -- you see, people would have been reviled — as they should be
but aren’t these days — at such a prospect.
Today, though, such a
film is not an unfortunate, ill-advised mistake. It’s Academy Award
material, and other than a sick obsession with the Holocaust, there
can be no other reason why “Jakob” was produced.
Given this incessant obsession, you can’t help but be amused when comedians
like Jerry Seinfeld poke fun at all of these Holocaust movies. He made an
entire episode of his show mocking the outrage of others surrounding a
romantic interlude he and a girlfriend had during a screening of
“Schindler’s List.”
Sadly, the Holocaust preoccupation is not just an episode of “Seinfeld”
or an interminable catalog of movies. Today, the Holocaust is big business
with a complete product line. There are more people getting jobs based on
the Holocaust. There are more lawyers filing lawsuits based on the
Holocaust. And there are more films on the Holocaust. All of this while
there are less and less Holocaust survivors still alive.
And let’s not
forget the official U.S. National Holocaust Museum in Washington. Doesn’t
this museum belong more appropriately in Germany, or in Austria — from where Hitler
hailed and where, today, a fascist presidential candidate praised Hitler
as a job provider and his S.S. Waffen as men of character.
Unfortunately, like some industries, the Holocaust has become a promising
career path. There are people running a plethora of Holocaust organizations
and foundations. They get grants and raise money in fundraising letters, so
that “we will never forget.” There are a lot of careers built on this Holocaust Business.
Again, I have no problem with remembering history, including the great
tragedies. But there is something really wrong about a people —the Jews— who, with such a
rich religion, with such a rich history spanning thousands of years, when they replace that whole history with a few years in recent history, spanning
less than a decade.
Today, while most Jews know little about their religion, and even less about the long-enduring history of the Jewish people, everyone knows about the Holocaust. And it seems that this event has not only become Jewish history — it has unfortunately become the Jewish religion.
There have been many other devastating tragedies in Jewish
history — pogroms, Inquisitions, etc. In fact, most Jews don’t know about a
Jewish tragedy equal to, if not worse than the Holocaust—the 12th Century
wholesale massacre of the Oriental Jews of North Africa living in the
Maghreb (now known as Morocco, Libya, and Tunisia). That massacre was
committed by the Al-Mohad Arab Moslem dynasty, though, not the more
politically correct far right-wing Nazi perpetrators. So the memory of
those Jews is apparently not as important. The Holocaust Business is a
politically correct industry.
It is a great shame when a few-year tragedy becomes our central focus, the
central experience of a people with many achievements and positive events.
But, again, it is even more lamentable, when the tragedy is pushed on others
in the form of endless products.
Besides the movies, books, miniseries,
etc., there are the trial lawyers and their class-action lawsuits. Again,
though the numbers of Holocaust survivors who could benefit are growing very
thin, every day there are more and more class-action lawsuits being filed
against corporations who had any connections with the Holocaust, using slave
labor, such as in the case of Ford Motor Company, or using the concentration
camp inmates as human guinea pigs, such as in the case of Bayer.
Should these companies be punished for their wrongdoing? Sure. But should today’s
stockholders and consumers of products of those companies — they would be the
ones to ultimately bear the burden of the multi-million dollar awards and
settlements — be punished for something which occurred before most of them
were born and with which most had nothing to do?
Should greedy trial lawyers get millions for suffering during the Holocaust,
when they never even experienced the pain of the Holocaust, and most of its
victims are now dead and will never benefit from the lawsuits? And why did
they wait all of these years to file these suits which could have provided a
decent life for many of these deceased survivors?
Is it a coincidence that
a primary lawyer filing these lawsuits — who has transformed these Holocaust
suits into a career — is named Ed Fagan? Charles Dickens would be proud.
Remember Fagan from his Oliver Twist? Sad to say, but for lawyers, the
Holocaust has become the new tobacco, the latest Oliver Twist from which to
make an easy buck. Most of the Holocaust victims and survivors — who, again,
are also mostly dead — would not want their memories to live on in this way,
and like my grandfather, they would not want the Germans’ or corporations’
money.
Besides the trial lawyers, settlement terms of some of
these cases provide that most of the money will end up going to liberal
social causes and groups, anyway — hardly victims of the Holocaust. To the
lawyers, the Holocaust is just another product to exploit.
Maybe Jerry Lewis’ clown Holocaust movie was just a good product, a good
business decision, but before its time. After all, when the film was shot,
Lewis owned a chain of child-and family-oriented movie theaters. He probably
figured that if he threw in kids, a clown, and the Holocaust, the movie
would make big bucks in those theaters.
With the success of “Life is Beautiful,” with the success of the Holocaust lawsuits, movies, careers, with the success of the whole set of Holocaust products, he’s probably
kicking himself. Though it’s rumored that a few years ago, he, too, used
his ridiculous movie to make money, by reportedly showing snippets of it
during a French telethon. Et tu, Jerry?
It’s sad that the Holocaust has become just another business, just another
subsidiary of the whole civil rights conglomerate. But there is hope. On
its debut weekend, “Jakob the Liar” came in at a very disappointing eighth
in the ranks of box office showings, with only $2.2 million in ticket sales.
Maybe “Jakob” will be the last Holocaust comedy, and maybe the consumers
of the Holocaust Business are letting the producers know they are now
growing tired of the product. I’m not holding my breath, though. I’m
bracing for the day when I turn on my T.V. to see an infomercial touting the
latest silly Holocaust product, an abomination to all who suffered through
the
After all, he chose to bomb the munitions and industrial complex at Auschwitz, but
not the gas chambers, railroad tracks, or Birkenau, which was the real
extermination camp. Boatloads of people, including those on the St.
Louis, were turned away at the U.S. shores by our government and returned to
their deaths in Nazi Europe.
Reportedly, Lewis was on anti-depressant and not in his right
mind when he made and funded his memorial to the Six Million.
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