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The Independent Review
Danny Balint (Ryan Gosling), the white noise at the heart of The.
Believer,. is an incredible figure in every sense of the word. A
neo-Nazi given to. lifting. weights, assaulting frail Jewish kids
and planting bombs, something about. him. doesn't ring true. After
a fascist meeting in New York, a young woman,. Carla. (Summer Phoenix)
whispers that corny old line, "You're not like the others,.
are. you?". The joke and the horror of the film is that he's
not. He's Jewish.
Like so many incredible stories, this one is based on fact. Daniel.
Burrows. was a member of the American Nazi Party in the Sixties,
who hid his Jewish. identity for years, until The New York Times
rumbled him. The same thing. happens. to Danny, and it's the journalist's
threat to run the story that jolts this. film. into ugly life. "Put
that in The New York Times and I'll kill myself,". screams.
Danny. And suddenly you discover that you don't want him to die.
Danny's a monster, but his fear makes him one of us. Hitchcock once.
famously. observed that an audience watching Psycho breathes a sigh
of relief when. the car. containing Janet Leigh's corpse sinks safely
into the swamp. We will. Danny's. secret to disappear in much the
same way. Danny and his mates gatecrash a. Jewish. deli and Danny
humiliates the waiter by pointing out the absurdities of. kosher.
law. As the camera takes in the bemused reaction of his bovver-boy
friends,. we. scan their faces, too, desperate for Danny to shut
up, terrified that. they're. about to guess. At a weekend fascist
retreat, a Nazi meathead tries to push. Danny around, and Danny
loses control (to the soundtrack's euphoric wails),. head-butting
the man until he crashes to the ground. Phew. That'll keep. Danny.
safe for a while.
Having made the audience complicit in such madness, writer-director.
Henry. Bean then laughs in our faces. Resistance, it turns out,
is futile. Danny. is. obsessed by faith, as the title of the film
suggests. His fury against the. Jews. is that they don't fight back
- whether it be against the Nazis, or against. their God. Flashbacks
laced throughout the movie show Danny arguing with. his. teachers
about Abraham's willingness to sacrifice his beloved son, Isaac,.
simply. to please the Lord. The kid's certainly persuasive ("God's
a power-drunk. madman!"). Instead of rejecting religion, however,
Danny-the-adult tries to. create a new one; an anti-faith that has
more than a little in common with. the. tortured defiance of Flannery
O'Connor's Hazel Motes. Like Motes, Danny's. rebellion is skin-deep.
"Is that why you became a Nazi," scoffs Carla, "so.
that. you could talk about Jews all day?" Danny thinks he's
escaping martyrdom.. Of. course, he's heading straight towards it.
Such paradoxes may sound a little abstract. The extraordinary thing.
about. Bean is that he has written a brainy script that rarely gets
bogged down in. words. The humour is often visual: skinheads play
First World War board. games as. excitedly as toddlers. Danny's
family life, meanwhile, is captured in a. snatched. moment between
him and his father - Danny comes from a long line of witty,. defeated
men, that's all we need to know. In another scene, Danny and his.
friends are forced to talk to concentration- camp survivors as part
of. their. "sensitivity training". The survivors fail
to present a united front, one. hissed. exchange, in particular,
pounding its way into our heads. Mutters one, "The. Holocaust
was God's punishment for disobeying his laws!". The anguished.
reply:. "Don't talk about that in front of them!"
The danger is that some will feel not enough has been explained.
But. we're. not at school. American History X, similarly concerned
with a neo-Nazi's. "transfiguration", made that mistake.
It looked slick and sugary at the. time. It. looks even cruder now.
What the films share are extraordinary central performances.. Twenty-one-.
year -old Gosling is cute as a rat. He's like Robert de Niro, before
de. Niro. became everyone's favourite grumpy old man; like Tim Roth
and Gary Oldman,. before Hollywood turned them into affected grotesques.
Actors love to play. characters in disguise, but this never feels
like a showcase role. Gosling. can. do everything: convincing as
a paranoid loner, but equally plausible as a. sexual. being. When
he's with Carla, he looks about 14: naive - daft, even.
Theresa Russell and Billy Zane as Lina and Curtis, the charismatic.
couple. who want Danny to work for their underground fascist movement,
provide the. perfect foil. Ruthless talent scouts, they're all the
more sinister because. they. never bare their teeth. Like the avuncular
killer in The Vanishing, they're. as. concerned with eating three
good meals a day as they are with causing harm.. Carla (Lina's daughter,
as it turns out) completes the foursome, and. Phoenix. makes the
most of a tricky part. Her best moment comes as she sits naked.
astride. Curtis, a tableau she's planned for Danny to see. As she
turns her gaze. towards. him, her eyes suggest a soul lost in Hell.
Bean's point is that everyone's a double agent. In his eagerness
to. push. that point home, however, he crams in too much towards
the end. New. characters. are introduced who add nothing, and a
sub-plot involving the assassination. of a. prominent Jewish businessman
takes up too much time. The black-and-white. fantasies about the
Holocaust are also overplayed. The story is naturally. atmospheric
(the hand -held camera work is perfect; New York hasn't looked.
as. molecular, as airy and strange since Annie Hall). It's naturally
thrilling. -. what will happen when the journalist runs the story?
You don't really need. anything else.
For a debut, though, The Believer is astonishing. The only depressing.
thing. is the way in which it has been received in its homeland.
Despite winning. the. Grand Jury prize at Sundance, no distributor
wants to release it. Even the. television networks, "in the
light of 11 September", don't want to get. involved.. How ironic.
If any film shows up the insanity of fanaticism, it's this one..
Perhaps its real crime, though, is to show that religion itself
is. inherently. flawed.
In the climactic dream sequence, we see Danny climbing endless stairs,.
with. a rabbi intoning, "There's nothing up there". That's
quite a stance in a. country. where 90 per cent of the population
professes to believe in a higher power.. In. interviews, Bean has
stressed that he himself is Jewish, and that he now. regularly attends
synagogue. Maybe this is self- protection, maybe it's. not. The.
fact is, it shouldn't matter what Bean is. People have a right to
make. godless. films. Bean's made one, and it's as brilliant as
it is humane.
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Hannah Mcgill |