The O2 Academy is Oxford’s biggest live venue: acts perform there most nights during term time. The varied line-up of indie bands and the occasional big name make up for the long queues and overpriced drinks.
If you’re looking for something a bit different, then Cellar is for you. Underground in more ways than one, it hosts everything from drum & bass nights to jazz bands and reggae artists, and at night it becomes Oxford’s best hipster haunt. It can feel a bit cramped on busy nights, but the bar is well-priced and it’s a mere five minute walk from most of the city centre colleges.
Legend has it that Radiohead gave their very first gig at the Jericho Tavern. It’s not difficult to see why: it’s an intimate venue which draws an enthusiastic crowd of students and locals alike. There’s upmarket food and real ales, and it’s a favourite with local bands.
Also based in the trendy district of Jericho in north Oxford is Freud’s, a bit of a chameleon. CafeÌ and restaurant by day, cocktail bar and live jazz venue by night, it’s the perfect place to relax with a drink after a long week of lectures and tutorials. Set in a cavernous converted church, the architecture is stunning too.
If classical music is your thing then the Sheldonian Theatre is a must. It hosts concerts by professional orchestras as well as student ensembles such as OUO (Oxford University Orchestra). Nearby, the Holywell Music Room is the oldest concert hall in the UK, where there are regular chamber music concerts and solo recitals.
Many a student band has given their debut at The Art Bar (formerly The Bullingdon). As well as supporting student and local bands, the venue is part of the indie touring circuit. At about twenty minutes out of town, it’s not particularly central, but definitely worth the walk for the bands on offer.
It’s strange chatting to a band straight after seeing them up on a festival main-stage. As I sit down with Dave Hosking and Tim Hart of the Aussie folk-rock outfit Boy & Bear, I’m still a little speechless from their incredible performance just minutes earlier.
When we meet at Green Man, Boy & Bear are in the middle of a jam-packed festival season, taking in a country a day on the European leg of their tour. They’re squeezing in two UK shows before heading off to Sweden the next day. “We came straight from Holland last night… I literally haven’t eaten all day!” exclaims Dave as they fill me in on their busy schedule. It’s clear, however, that a hectic life on the road has done nothing to diminish the band’s energy and enthusiasm on stage.
Discussing which songs are their favourites to perform, drummer Tim explains, “You start to learn what works, and if something works it makes it more enjoyable. When a crowd’s responding I think it helps you to enjoy your- self more on stage. We could probably play anything off the new record quite comfortably and feel good about it for that reason.”
Said new record is Harlequin Dream, released in 2013. It certainly lives up to Tim’s description as a crowd-pleaser, moving further into the realms of pop tentatively explored in their de- but Moonfire, with infectious tracks ‘Southern Sun’ and ‘Three Headed Woman’ leading the way. I ask Dave, lead-singer and lyricist, what prompted the change in direction.
“I think when you’re doing this you’ve just got to follow your instincts and do what feels right… In this case, one of the last songs we wrote for the first album was a song called ‘Part Time Believer’ and that definitely drew inspiration from 70s pop-rock.
“We were looking at American bands from that era like Eagles. It felt very natural for us as a band so we fuelled that until the record fell that way.”
Perhaps so much time on the road has contributed to the changing style of the music they’re producing. “It’s really interesting,” Dave comments. “They say where you listen to music really changes your experience of it. I heard someone say that listening to music waiting for a bus is very different to listening to music on a bus. So that’s my philosophical way of seeing it.”
He adds with a chuckle, “I like to listen to the same music when I read a book on tour.” Tim ponders, “For me, the music starts to create a sense of place. I just finished this really long one, so I ended up listening to Sigur RoÌs for about two weeks straight.” He laughs and turns to Dave, “You wrote ‘Old Town Blues’ in Prague, on a pretty dark day, and that was inspiration wasn’t it? It’s a bit darker…”
Dave pauses to consider this, “Yeah I suppose. Maybe a place will shift your state of mind or where you’re at emotionally, but for me personally, inspiration tends to come from more internal stuff.”
With Moonfire picking up numerous ARIA awards, it’s easy to see why Boy & Bear have achieved such success in their native Australia. It’s not quite clear why their reception here has been more lukewarm.
“We kind of felt like the old stuff, though it did really well in Australia, didn’t do much at all overseas.” Dave muses, “But people know the tracks and it’s cool now, there’s a nice balance… We could definitely compare a London crowd to a Melbourne crowd: both very hard to please…” “But very appreciative” Tim interjects hastily, with a slightly nervous laugh.
Judging by today’s reception to their laid back charisma, Boy & Bear have a firm and loyal contingent of fans here on British soil. Maybe it’s just taken longer for us to catch on to these rockers from down under.
Boy & Bear will play at the O2 Academy Oxford on Sunday 16th November.
The thrill of the new Oxford year is once again upon us and there’s only one thing we’re thinking of: freshers are coming. Park End will once more become the deep waters for Oxford’s finest sharks, aroused by the fresh flesh around them. Holiday flings in Thailand or Cambodia (or wherever it is the cool kids spend summers these days) are long gone, and what we all really want is a good post-Wahoo fuck, preferably with some Hassan’s on the way. That’s the dream, right?
Or not. I’ve been through my fair share of freshers, and this year I was up for a change. Having found myself in Oxford a few weeks before term properly began, I noticed that all the pubs are filled with a different kind of creature altogether — the grads. Now, here’s a challenge. In my mind those guys acquired a sexy air of maturity. They were the experienced ones; I was the innocent lamb. Believe me, that’s not a position I’m often in. Even worse — he was the Real Man, and I was the lady to be won and pleasured. For a while I forgot that I am a strong, independent woman and I wanted to be shown the big wide world by someone who’s about to get his MPhil/DPhil/MBA/I don’t care.
The first thing to note is that the grad god I spied in King’s Arms was easier to approach than any fresher. He was not on the floor, oozing vomit and horniness. Instead he was standing by the bar with a wicked little smile, ready to be distracted by no one but me (or so I chose to think). There followed names, colleges, subjects. No childish excitement at OH MY GOD OXFORD OH MY GOD PUB YAY VODKA. Just a subtle ‘wanna come back to my bar?’ and the scene was set for my night of exploration. Trust me, hunting for the perfect grad is a classier take on sharking, and it involves fewer incoherent teenagers. When you find yourself in a Holywell Manor bedroom staring at a full set of ropes, you’ll know who to thank (or sue).
One drawback of the whole experience is that Freshers’ week is ruined for me. I don’t care about fighting for those paint party tickets anymore; I’ll be too busy sneaking into Maxwell’s. First years can no longer seduce me with their boyish enthusiasm and passion for cheap lager. I’m too young to be a cougar. It’s also satisfying to find men who don’t think that cunnilingus is just something they forgot from their Latin class. In short, I am a complete convert. Or so I say, until Park End persuades me otherwise…
July 2014 saw the departure of 23 Oxford students on a pioneering RAG expedition: a ten-day charity climb of Mt. Kilimanjaro with a fundraising target of £46,000. An extinct volcano, fourth of the Seven Summits (the highest mountains of each continent) and at 5,985m (19,340 ft), Africa’s tallest freestanding mountain would, we were told, be a breeze. So, with malaria pills and £47,583.93 of the most successful fundraising total in RAG history at the ready, we felt invincible.
As it so happens, it took us two full days before we even saw the mountain, let alone the summit. Days at the tail-end of the rainy season are not always clear, so our first glimpse of the mountain was not until the second day of our journey. It rose up out of flatlands, flanked by the occasional hill and blocking out the horizon — it was the horizon. In the lackadaisical fashion typical of those suffering in intense heat, we arrived at the foot of the wrong trail as the sun was setting. What followed was a three-hour race against the oncoming darkness through coniferous forest with our 26 guides, porters, and cooks. We were promptly fed a three-course meal of broth, rice, vegetable stew with strips of dried fish, and slivers of slippery mango with tea, in a carpeted dining tent.
Permit me to seize this opportunity to give you an insight into my level of hiking/ camping expertise: upon seeing the campsite, I exclaimed, “It’s like a music festival!” My boots were already worn in and I had not packed a coat; though I had been persuaded by my friend’s mother to bring an anorak on the eve of my departure. My sleeping bag was twenty years old and therefore twenty years too heavy; my rucksack had a few crucial rips, which somewhat affected its usefulness. Nor did I have a sleeping mat (which left my rock-studded posterior with many bruises).
Thankfully, the next day was easier. Although the morning was spent attempting to see through the thick mist that had settled overnight, after our paper-bag lunch of hardboiled eggs, fried chicken, and finger-length Tanzanian bananas, we managed to break through to reach visibility once more. The silence was incredible — although it meant my heavy pulse from climbing was all the more audible — and in our huddle of tents we slept beneath the unbelievably bright stars.
Contrary to our expectations of one more day’s hiking and a hugely desirous good night’s sleep, we found out at lunch the next day that we would be attempting the summit that evening.
Five hours of baking sun later, we came to Kibo, the last port of call for four routes. At midnight, we were told to fall into line. What followed was six hours of trailing across a steep scree slope by the light of the full moon, as the temperature dropped and our water bottles began to clunk with ice. Through the cloud cover, we could see the distant lights of Moshi and Arusha. We finally reached Gilman’s Point (some 5,700m) and huddled together as we watched the hinter- land of the sky burgeon into a deep, royal blue. This was the final point at which we could turn back but, with the determination of someone who had spent the last few months pestering people for money, I put one foot in front of the other. Collective delirium descended. My head felt as if someone had hit it with a mallet.
The sun was just rising as we got to Stella Point (5,739m), spilling over the horizon and giving everything a beautiful red glow. For the last 300m I had three guides alternating which of them was leading my arm and telling me I was imara kama simba (strong as a lion). We passed glaciers like the ones you see on nature programmes of the Arctic Circle. By this time, I was past caring. When we finally reached the summit, the sun was already high in the sky and we had three minutes to take a picture before the descent.
This took two hours and I slid all the way. We then had our last night camping underneath the stunning stars, next to a glacial waterfall. The temperatures soared, and we eventually reached the rain forests and Marangu Gate. After another long bus journey, we reached Nairobi, piled into a seven seater and concluded our incredible journey with alcohol and dancing. At home, it took a week to scrub the dust out, leaving only the near-hallucinatory memory of this mountain of scree, sky and silences of somnolent power.
In a development that will leave Oxford outreach officers from Somerville to St Hugh’s with their heads in their hands, Friday 17th October will see the first ever Varsity horse race, set to take place at the world-famous Newmarket race course.
The race, brainchild of Oxford student Harry Beckett, will form the final event of the Dubai Future Champions Day, a high-profile sporting extravaganza comprised of six races, whichmanaged to attract crowds of over 10,000 people last year.
The Oxford team, captained by experienced Christ Church jockey Lizzie Hamilton, and expertly coached by Great British Racing, has been training intensively for the inaugural race at Oaksey House in Lambourne. Though seven jockeys are in the squad, only five will make the cut for the race itself. But no mat- ter who does ride out to face the Tabs on race day, all seven jockeys have already been part of something momentous — an achievement made all the more impressive by the fierce competition for squad inclusion.
The race will be broadcast live on everyone’s favourite horseracing channel — Racing UK — and will appear the following day on Channel 4. For those seeking a more professional touch, the Cherwell broadcasting team will also be providing coverage.
According to the event’s organisers, students can sign up online for free entry to both Newmarket on race-day, and to Ascot the following day for the QIPCO British Champions Day.
Prospective attendees of this event are warned to book before October 10th. It would be a shame to miss the newest Varsity event on the calendar, after all.
Want to play university level sport but not played much Rugby or Football? Never fear, Cherwell Sport asked three students to talk about some of the less obvious university sports that welcome everyone from the expert to the complete novice.
American Football
The perception of American football is not always a positive one. The brutish force of the hits, the constant stop-start nature of the game, the gladiatorial armour 
that somehow is seen as emasculating… all have contributed to a dislike of the sport. It is somewhat alien to us here, something ostentatiously and overtly American, with Air Force flyovers lighting up the already star-spangled atmosphere. It almost feels like a pantomime — something to ridicule.
This being said, there is a great beauty in a sport that elicits such passion. There is no greater feeling than seeing a play executed properly, typified by a perfect spiral of a deep ball as it falls into the hands of the receiver. It is a game of strength and power, but it is also one of intelligence and strategy. The whole team has to come together and perform to win.
No person is less important than the other: for instance, if the offensive line can’t go, then the passing and running game won’t work. It is a sport that needs numbers, passion and cohesion. Even on a cold, muddy pitch in Buckinghamshire, the exhilaration of putting on your helmet, running onto the field with your teammates, and playing the hardest you can means there is no place you’d rather be. So if you already love American Football and have played for years, or are just starting out and want to try something new, why not come down and join the Oxford University American Football Lancers? You can be part of a close-knit, passionate unit that wants to win.
Also, Cambridge is in our conference this year: who could pass up another chance to shoe the tabs? Go Lancers.
Tom Fox
Korfball
“‘Korfball’… what does that even mean?” “No wait, you’re saying that’s an actual sport?” “Sounds like some kind of rolled minced meat.”
Similar things crossed my mind when I first discovered Korfball on the list of things I had absentmindedly signed up for during Fresh- ers’ Fair. A year on and I’ve travelled around the country attending tournaments and played in the most thrilling sports match of my life against Cambridge.
Korfball is a mixed team sport lying some- where between basketball and netball, with a team of eight split into four girls and four guys. The dynamic passing and movement has more of a netball feel but the fast paced, end-to-end play and shooting style (from short-range layup shots to five metre hero shots) can seem a lot more like basketball. The nature of the game means you’ve got to be a team player to win (though some nice shooting skills definitely won’t hurt).
Korfball at Oxford attracts a wide range of players, from fresh- ers to PhD students, new- bies to experienced play- ers and of course both guys and girls. We’re fun-loving (with some good socials lined up this term), but com- petitive nonetheless. We compete weekly in the Oxfordshire league, BUCS tournaments and the annual Varsity Match against Cambridge.
Come down to Iffley Sports Centre for our first training/ taster sessions on Sunday morn- ing from 11-12:30am and Wednes- day evening from 9-10:30pm in 1st week.
Alastair Glennie
Boxing
Well done, you’ve made it to Oxford. Unfortunately, UCAS has made a grave misunderstanding and misspelt the name of the university by neglecting its first letter: B. That’s right, you’ve been accepted to Boxford. But seriously, you’re a fresher and I know what you’re thinking, it’s time for that glorious fresh start.
You’ve no doubt been told that a world of infinite possibilities is right here in the ‘city of dreaming spires’. This may be true, but what if I told you that you’d be sure to experience something fantastical by venturing just out side of the city and sailing right of the Cape of Good Hope (this, of course, being the pub on the Cowley roundabout)? Keep following that road to Oxford’s Iffley Road Sports Complex and if you rock up at the correct time you’ll have entered OUABC (Oxford University Amateur Boxing Club) territory.
Chances are you’ve never boxed before and the even greater chances are that you’ve never imagined yourself boxing. Now is your opportunity to seize the day by wrapping both hands around a skipping rope and conjuring up those finely-honed playground skills. OUABC is an incredibly inclusive bunch and many of its members are there to train with the club, not necessarily to spar.
Boxing training is a great overall workout consisting of intensive cardio through skip- ping, strength training through body weight exercises and technique work with a punch bag or in pairs. We must stress that we are very open to girls training, and indeed sparring. So if you’re interested in improving your general fitness (or at least keeping it intact through- out a term of dodgy student nutrition), or if you fancy yourself sporting a full blue at Varsity then you’d better start committing now. Most importantly, just chill. No one’s going to throw you into the ring from the beginning. You’ll only spar if and when you want to and the coaches feel you’re ready.
Just bring water; with two free sessions there’s no excuse to not get stuck in. Will you make it to Boxford?
One hundred years ago, a new character burst onto screens for the first time. On February 7, 1914, the release of a 6-minute film, Kid Auto Races at Venice, marked the birth of the ‘Little Tramp’, the character that made Charlie Chaplin famous and left an indelible imprint on cinema history.
Audiences watched as a figure clad in baggy pants, a derby hat, and outsized, ill-fitting shoes, sporting a toothbrush moustache and wielding a cane, jerked and lurched across the screen, leaving chaos in his wake; an icon was born.
In Kid Auto Races at Venice — which allegedly took just forty-five minutes to shoot and was mostly improvised — Chaplin plays a tramp that repeatedly spoils a director’s takes by interrupting the shot. The following year’s film The Tramp (1915) saw the character develop more fully into the vagrant as which he would be best known. Chaplin would continue to play the Tramp for the next 22 years. The character’s hundredth birthday this year has been celebrated by film festivals and special screenings around the world.
A tramp might seem an unlikely candidate for such wild popularity, considering a constantly unlucky vagrant is far from your typical hero. Chaplin, who grew up intermittently in the workhouse, created a character that was deliberately unheroic: the Tramp is one of capitalism’s victims, not its victors. In City Lights (1931) the Tramp is mistaken by a blind girl for a millionaire and struggles to make enough money to pay for an operation to cure her sight. The film ends ambiguously, as the girl sees the Tramp for the first time; we never know if she shuns or accepts her poverty-stricken admirer.
In Modern Times (1936) we watch as the Tramp struggles against the punishing repetitiveness of industrial labour. In one scene he becomes wedged in the cogs of a great machine, literally trapped in the mechanisms of industrialised capitalism. In the hands of other filmmakers, capitalism’s upheavals and injustices would be material enough for tragedy. In Chaplin’s hands they were translated into another language: comedy.
Chaplin was the slapstick comedian par excellence. He detested talkies so much that he completed City Lights as a silent picture, despite considerable pressure to turn it into a talkie. He was notorious for the precision with which he constructed his scenes (he famously demanded 342 takes of a single scene from City Lights). And who could forget the film’s perfectly choreographed boxing scene — which took four days to rehearse and six to shoot — and the incredible deftness of Chaplin’s performance, at once graceful and hilarious?
Cinema was a different form one hundred years ago. It was more a medium than anything, and still emerging as an art in its own right. Chaplin’s Tramp helped shape cinema’s development; to Walter Benjamin, Chaplin’s 1928 film The Circus was, “The first work of maturity in the art of film.”
How impoverished might that art be today if Chaplin had never donned his derby hat? We might not have the comedy of Jacques Tati and his character Monsieur Hulot, or the sublime films of Andrei Tarkovsky. Without Chaplin’s example we would not have Giulietta Masina’s luminous performance as Gelsomina in Federico Fellini’s La St rada, another film that spins humour out of despair. Animation would be severely diminished — both Felix the Cat and Mickey Mouse bear traces of the Tramp.
Another of the Tramp’s admirers, T.S. Eliot, once remarked that “Charlie Chaplin is not English, or American, but a universal figure, feeding the idealism of hungry millions in Czecho-Slovakia and Peru.” A century on, the Tramp continues to inspire. If he was a universal figure, it was because he stirred universal emotions: in 1929, Walter Benjamin observed that Chaplin “appeals both to the most international and the most revolutionary emotion of the masses: their laughter”.
What’s in a name? That’s the question confronted by Ida’s protagonist, a young nun named Anna. On the eve of making her vows, she is sent from her convent to meet her aunt, a depressed former prosecutor for Poland’s socialist regime. Her only surviving relative, she reveals that Anna is in fact named Ida, a Jewish name hidden alongside the fate of her parents, who perished mysteriously during the Holocaust. Together they set out to find their family’s final resting place, and to deal with the pain of their collective past.
Shot in cold black and white, it is a resolutely melancholic film, but it’s an honest one, and it maintains a dry humour in the face of its bleak subject. “A Jewish Nun!”, several characters incredulously remark, while her atheist aunt enjoys goading her for her piousness, particularly after they’re joined in their car by a handsome saxophone player.
At first a passive protagonist, Ida’s light grey habit and matching coat lend her a spectral quality, broken only by her black, saucer-like eyes. She drifts across the snow covered ground, watching, listening, and eventually confronting the horrors of her past. The more she comes to understand about the world, the more she observes it with a quiet disappointment. Through her gaze we see the cruelties of our world afresh, and through her actions we see the compromises we make to survive.
A splash of dark mud on Ida’s light grey coat. Can she return to the scrubbed walls and silent corridors of the convent, or is she now caught in the wreckage of post-war Poland? The film contrasts the hopelessness of the aunt, caught in the past, with Ida’s concern for her own future. What will it mean to be Ida, and what has become of Anna?
In the stunning final sequence, Ida literally steps into a new identity, and realises the empty future it promises her.
Agata Trzebuchowska is a silent revelation in the role, every emotion registering in a slight tilt of her head, a downcasting of those eyes. We are made to watch, as Ida’s curious optimism slowly gives way to confusion and disappointment, before finally hardening into a resolute determination. In this way, Trzebuchowska effectively contrasts Ida’s burgeoning independence with her childlike inexperience.
Ida’s static camerawork imbues the film with a meditative stillness. The tableau-like monochromatic images capture the exhaustion of a post-war world which offers lots of regrets but few new beginnings. The painterly compositions place the characters at the edges of the frames, small, isolated, inhabiting a world they’re powerless to change.
The film has been described as a throwback to the glory days of the art house, its aspect ratio and gorgeous black and white photography recalling the works of the European Auteurs. Whilst certainly reminiscent of Ingmar Bergman’s masterpiece, Persona, both in its plotting and its exploration of the intersection of people’s identities, Ida is a film about humans and history, not ideas.
Its closest cousin is perhaps last year’s brilliant A Coffee in Berlin, a similarly personal look at a Europe still haunted by the ghosts of World War II.
Ida is captivating and artful, fascinating and emotional, a film brimming with observations and style, which only ever serve the heart wrenching human story at its fore.
It is a film about identities, both personal and collective, but fundamentally, it is the story of a young woman trying to define herself. What, then, is there in a name? Whatever you want there to be.
It’s not often that when going to see a piece of theatre my main concern is simply if I will understand what the cast are saying. However, given my Latin and Greek is not so much ‘little and less’ as ‘none and none at all,’ in anticipation of previewing the Oxford University Classical Drama Society’s production of The Furies, performed entirely in the original Greek, I’m more than a little nervous.
Luckily, when I arrive I’m furnished with a script showing the text in both English and transliterated Greek. In the actual performances, this will be made even easier by the surtitles to be projected above the stage, so that non-classicists like me can follow along without missing out on any of the action onstage. Though grateful for the translation, what surprised me was how little I needed it.
I found myself drawn away from the text, enthralled in the actors’ use of movement, the power of their delivery of the lines, and the compelling use of song and different registers of speech. Although knowing what was being said enriched the experience immeasurably, it is a testament to the skill of everyone involved that even without the script at hand, it would have been possible to get a sense of what was happening, and to enjoy the drama as a visual and auditory spectacle.
Chatting with the cast, director, and production team gives me some insight into how this remarkable and atmospheric interpretation of Aeschylus’s play was developed. My script has a reproduction of Francis Bacon’s crucifixion triptych on the front, and director Arabella Currie cites the British painter as a big influence on the production, which treats Aeschylus himself as a painter or musician, using textures, circles and lines, pace and rhythm, to explore untapped possibilities of the play.
Given the visceral, violent imagery of the body running through the language of the play, Bacon is a fitting reference point. His influence can already be seem in the cast’s use of stylised, contorted movement even without the set and costumes, which will display further Baconian influences.
The physicalities of the different characters are striking, particularly the way in which the Furies themselves are clearly one entity despite only rarely moving in unison. The cast tell me that they studied clips from nature documentaries as inspiration for their ways of moving, particularly predator and prey interactions – a clever way of conveying the primal vengefulness of the Furies in a play that deals in part with the role of revenge within civilisation.
The actors relearned the art of movement, stripping away their individual habits to begin afresh to move as characters with varying degrees of humanity, from Orestes, a mortal, to gods, goddesses, and the Furies themselves.
Though the play is performed in the original, a very rare occurrence in modern productions, the team stress that what this isn’t going to be is any attempt at reproducing the performance conditions of Greek drama, and there are some elements of it, for example, the chorus speaking and moving together, which they intentionally moved away from, in favour of introducing more innovative and radical devices, such as a musical ensemble whose contributions to the piece will be semi-improvised, allowing them to interact with the acting ensemble in real time, becoming part of the psychological world of the drama.
Only about half of the cast are classicists, the rest studying a range of subjects including Medicine, Music, and English, with varying levels of Ancient Greek, some speaking none at all prior to being cast in the play. Despite this, I couldn’t have begun to pick out the non-classicists in the ensemble, and I’m surprised to learn that Jack Taylor, who takes the role of Apollo, speaks no Greek at all, despite his compelling performance.
The cast attribute their easy handling of an unfamiliar tongue to the support they’ve received from the classicists working with them, and the relationships they have built with the rest of the team over the three weeks they have been rehearsing together. Given the cast don’t have time to learn the meaning of everyone’s lines, it is extra important that they convey the meaning of their lines through tone and gesture, so the other actors can understand them, and react to what they are saying.
On the surface, the idea of a Greek play might seem like a purely academic exercise, lacking in broader public appeal. However, not only does this production promise to present a compelling interpretation of a classic for those both familiar and unfamiliar with its language, it also pushes the boundaries of speech, language, movement, and sound in ways most productions in English would simply not think to attempt. The Furies is essential viewing not only for those in relevant academic disciplines, but for anyone who loves theatre, and new theatrical experiences.
In the years after the Second World War, the globe was crossed with ‘ratlines’: a series of escape routes that allowed European fascists to flee to South America. Many were eventually captured and convicted. In 1960, Adolf Eichmann was caught in Argentina by the Israeli intelligence service and hanged in Israel two years later. In 1967, Franz Stangl was arrested in Brazil and extradited to West Germany, where he was sentenced to life imprisonment. But Dr. Josef Mengele, the notorious ‘Angel of Death’, evaded authorities for more than three decades.
Mengele is the subject of Wakolda (The German Doctor), the latest offering from Argentinian director Lucía Puenzo, adapted from her own novel of the same name. It is 1960, and Eva (Natalia Oriero) and Enzo (Diego Peretti) are taking their children to the small Patagonian town of Bariloche to revive Eva’s family hotel.
En route, they encounter a dapper stranger who calls himself Helmut Gregor (Àlex Brendemühl), a doctor from Germany. He takes a great interest in Eva, who is pregnant with twins, and in her underdeveloped daughter, Lilith (Florencia Bado), beginning hormone treatments on her to improve her growth. As the film progresses, the characters are made aware of the doctor’s true identity due to the work of a discerning archivist (the wonderful Elena Roger).
Nazis make great material for cinema, and Nazis on the run even more so. Wakolda is by no means the first time Mengele has been depicted on screen. In 1978, a year before Mengele’s death, Gregory Peck played the doctor in The Boys from Brazil, complete with Laurence Olivier as a Nazi hunter. 2010’s The Debt (starring Jessica Chastain and Helen Mirren) is about Mossad agents hunting ‘The Surgeon of Birkenau’, a character clearly modeled on Mengele.
The story of Mengele has been told and retold, and mythologized so that it is now part of our collective consciousness as a synonym for evil and a marker of the point where scientific ambition leaves nature and morality behind.
Where Wakolda differs from its Nazi thriller predecessors, and where it succeeds most, is its exploration of a young girl’s sexual and emotional development. Twelve-year-old Lilith is the film’s most complex and captivating character.
Beginning at her new school, Lilith, who is on the brink of adolescence but is alarmingly undersized, is teased for her diminutive figure and called a ‘dwarf’. As she lines up in her swimsuit with her schoolmates before swim class, Lilith is subject to a game in which the boys rate the girls’ bodies. The already shapely and flirtatious girls receive nine or ten; Lilith receives a zero.
Mengele convinces Lilith’s mother that the girl must have hormone treatment as soon as possible because she will soon hit puberty and the hormones will no longer be effective. Soon after beginning her treatment, Lilith menstruates for the first time, and we are shown her bloodstained underwear and her makeshift sanitary pad from toilet paper.
She is fascinated and flattered by the handsome, mysterious doctor, and has her first experiences of desire and sexual contact with a young boy, Otto. At times, we get the impression that the familiar, oft-told story of Mengele is an excuse to explore much more intimate subject matter.
Filmed in the snow-capped Patagonian mountains, the film’s other great strength is its sublime scenery, and its sheer visual magnificence. This landscape is contrasted with the unnatural activity of its inhabitants: Mengele’s monstrous experiments and Enzo’s eerie doll-making business. But this is not a simple dichotomy between the beauty of nature and the immorality of human ambitions.
The natural world is never kind or compassionate in this film. In one of the first scenes, the family and the doctor are forced to seek shelter from a storm. Later, when Eva gives birth prematurely to her twins, no medical help is available because of a blizzard. Rather than simply underscoring Mengele’s evil, or suggesting that human cruelty is an aberration, the film reminds us that nature itself can be indifferent, or worse, cruel and hostile.
At times Puenzo can be heavy-handed. Mengele’s speech about the Sonnenmenschen, for example, is a transparent reminder that he was a bad guy with bad aspirations, as if we didn’t know that already. The close-ups of Mengele’s journal, complete with Lilith’s voiceover narrating the events, sometimes feel clumsy and obvious. Lilith’s father makes dolls with artificially beating hearts for a living—an occupation which is far too neat and cute a rhyme with Nazi racial aspirations.
Still, even the father’s occupation is redeemed by a genuinely unnerving scene in a doll factory, where rows of workers produce identical figures, crafting their artificial lips, eyes, and hair: an army of flawlessly constructed girls at odds with Enzo’s own underdeveloped daughter.
Aside from these touches, for the most part the film is understated, rarely ostentatious, and far too cold and detached to descend into Nazi-hunter type theatrics. Brendemühl is a chilling Mengele, but he does relatively little besides glower: he is more of a threatening presence than an actual character. The film is altogether less interested in the German doctor than in the experiences of its girls and women, and at times Mengele feels almost like an unnecessary addition. As a Nazi thriller Wakolda doesn’t quite get there, but as a portrayal of the strange, distressing experiences of growing up, it is uncomfortably accurate.