Year Released: 2007 Directed By: Richard Berge, Bonni Cohen, Nicole Newnham Narration: Joan Allen (NR, 117 min.)
“All of this accumulated beauty had been stolen by the most murderous thieves that ever existed on the surface of the earth. How they could retain the nicety of the appreciation of great art and be exterminating millions of people in nearby concentration camps – I couldn’t understand it then, and I can’t understand it today.” So summarizes one World War II “monuments man” at the end of The Rape of Europa, one of a small group of U.S. soldiers charged with finding and returning the recovered fine art looted by the Nazis during Europe’s six-year holocaust that left 50 million people dead. When the Allies rerouted the personal war spoils – plus other priceless stashes of stolen art – of Adolf Hitler and Hermann Goering in 1945, the two sorting centers in Munich and Wiesbaden were recalled by another monuments-man as the greatest museums produced by civilization. Others include Paris’ Louvre and the State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg, Russia, parallel crucibles of culture that, like their countries, suffered disparate fates during the war. Vienna, Cracow, Florence: continental art capitals pillaged by the German army (“art collecting became a required pastime for the Nazi party elite”). The documentary blitzkrieg with which The Rape of Europa traces Hitler’s failed art-school aspirations to a salt mine in Austria with 6,500 paintings he hoped to hang in his bequest to greater mankind leaves viewers with the aforementioned veteran’s incomprehension about genocidal Rembrandt collectors. The film's tone and pacing are strictly A&E, while Marco d’Ambrosio’s musical score (with assists from Tchaikovsky and Polish composer Henryk Górecki) defines manipulation, though none neutralizes the sobering images and interviews, both historical and new. Endings happy (Gustav Klimt’s Adele Bloch-Bauer) and grave (the Monte Cassino monastery) carry with them historical figures such as frontline art academic Deane Keller, now interred at the U.S.-bombed Camposanto sanctuary in Pisa, Italy, thanks to his efforts to first preserve then restore the historic landmark. National identity resides in frescos, marble, and oils as within boundaries. Narrator Joan Allen: “Like refugees from battle, most of Europe’s art found its way home after the war. And like every civilian or solider who lived and died, every work of art had a story to tell. Never before had art been moved, hidden, and plundered on such a vast scale. Thousands of artworks remain unaccounted for.” Wanted: Raphael’s Portrait of a Young Man.
Antichrist Lars von Trier lives to affront again. Chaos, indeed, reigns. - Marc Savlov The Blind Side John Lee Hancock, director of The Rookie, scores with another sports drama, this time concerning a true football story. - Kimberley Jones Fantastic Mr. Fox Opens Wednesday. - Marjorie Baumgarten The Messenger Woody Harrelson and Ben Foster play two members of the military's casualty notification team, which delivers bad news to soldiers' next of kin. - Marjorie Baumgarten Ninja Assassin Opens Wednesday. - Marjorie Baumgarten Old Dogs Opens Wednesday. - Marjorie Baumgarten Planet 51 In a switcheroo, animated aliens fear the human in their midst. - Marc Savlov Precious: Based on the Novel 'Push' by Sapphire Much like the title character Precious, this rough-hewn movie overcomes the unlikely odds for its success. - Marjorie Baumgarten The Road Opens Wednesday. - Marjorie Baumgarten The Twilight Saga: New Moon Edward and Bella are back for more thwarted young vampiric love. - Marjorie Baumgarten Until the Light Takes Us This music documentary chronicles the history, ideology, and aesthetic of Norwegian black metal. - Raoul Hernandez