The Aftermath (2019)
Directed by James
Kent
Fox Searchlight
Pictures, 108 minutes, R (brief nudity)
★★★
The Aftermath, a
British post-World War II romantic drama, is based on the namesake novel by
Rhidian Brook. The title holds a double meaning. First, it is set in the
firebombed ruins of Hamburg, Germany, immediately after the war; second, it also
deals with the emotional aftershock of personal loss.
Colonel Lewis Morgan (Jason Clarke) arrives in the British
sector at a time in which thousands of Hamburg residents are homeless and combing
through rubble looking for loved ones, food, and possessions. The city is also
a hotbed of Werwolf activity, it
being the Nazis’ answer to the underground–a movement formed in late 1944 to
foment resistance to occupiers via assassination and terror.
Morgan is ensconced in digs he’d never come close to in Ye
Olde England. The sleek and well-appointed estate of modernist architect Stefan
Lubert (Alexander Skarsgård)
has been seized for Clarke’s use as a headquarters. Morgan sends for his wife
Rachel (Keira Knightley) to join him and things sour from the start. She does
not understand why he’d bring her to a city of death and destruction, hates
Germans, and is contemptuous of Lubert and his oh-so-utterly-unlike-England
house. She wants Lubert, his teenaged daughter Freda (Flora Thiemann), and
their housekeeper sent to the relocation camps.
Morgan, though, is an idealist who wants to help Germany
rebuild. He tries to befriend locals and has bonded with Lubert, whose wife was
killed in the bombing of the city. Morgan understands (though he hasn’t come to
grips with) loss, as his and Rachel’s son Michael was killed during the Blitz
of London. He’d like to allow the family to stay, as there is plenty of room
and Lubert is amenable to staying in the attic. Try telling that to a
14-year-old who viscerally dislikes the English as much as most of them hate
Germans. Increasingly she skips school to help dig out the city and falls under
the sway of Albert, a young Werwolf firebrand.
Other English officers and friends warn Morgan that he is naïve and that
sentiment grows as Werwolf killings
increase. He is determined, though, to apply the velvet glove rather than an
iron fist.
Perhaps Morgan should have been warned against leaving his
wife at home with a stud like Alexander Skarsgård! Rachel’s attitudes shift and a dangerous liaison develops. The Aftermath shifts from Hamburg to
reconciling passion, reason, and grief. It’s a good story that’s competently
told, though one usually expects more than just competence in a film and this
one is no exception. There’s nothing inherently wrong with the movie, yet it
feels flat and over-mannered. It is difficult to present emotionally gutted
characters in a convincing manner–especially when it’s so obvious that libidos
aren’t even in the same book, let alone on the same page, as their brains.
Perhaps the novel developed these themes better, but Rachel’s turnabout is too
sudden and Lubert’s icy distancing melts like some one fired up a blowtorch. One
also wonders why desperate Hamburg residents hadn’t confiscated parts of his
estate.
Oddly, the characters who remain emotionally shut down the
longest are the most convincing. Thiemann strikes a fine balance between
defiance and vulnerability–just as one expects from someone in their early
teens. Clarke, who looks like a bit like a young Colm Meany in this film, also
stays in character until it makes sense to shift. His demeanor of hard work and
dedication is compensatory, but it makes sense. I suspect that director James
Kent and the screenplay of James Shrapnel and Anna Waterhouse are more to blame
for gaps in the performances of Skårsgard
and Knightley, though I always find myself thinking two things in Keira
Knightley films: (a) She’s a poor man’s Natalie Portman, and (b) she should be
tied to a table and force-fed a sandwich.
Critics savaged The
Aftermath, though I give it a qualified thumb’s up. It brings to life
grainy black and white photos of Germany in the days in which the war is over,
but smoke still rises from the ruins and peace remains fragile. Its
foreshortened look at wartime loss notwithstanding, it also gives us a glance
at how individuals clear out the wreckage of personal trauma. It’s often the
case that those blocks are harder to move than the walls and foundations of
ruined buildings. The Aftermath could
have been a better film than it was, but its faults don’t warrant its critical beat-down.
Rob Weir
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