Film

'In the Fade' – Diane Kruger excels in tale of far-right violence and revenge

Diane Kruger is breathtaking in her first German-language role, as a woman bent on justice for the neo-Nazis who killed her husband and child

In the Fade comes to a close with a title card, conveying some sobering facts. Set in contemporary Hamburg, writer-director Fatih Akin’s new film is a work of fiction, but it signs off with stark reference to real-life events in modern Germany: the tally of people from an immigrant background murdered by neo-Nazis because of their ‘non-German origins’.

This information is relevant because In the Fade is a fictionalised account of exactly this kind of attack. It’s not a perfect movie – Akin pitches it as a thriller but it lacks the propulsive narrative energy to work on those terms. Still there is an unanswerable force to this angry, unblinking depiction of the consequences of far-right violence in Europe today.

There’s also the matter of the central performance by Diane Kruger. In her first German-language role, Kruger is extraordinary as Katja, wife of Kurdish-born Nuri (Numan Acar), who is killed along with their young son Rocco in a bomb attack by neo-Nazis. Winning the Best Actress honours at Cannes last year, Kruger is fiercely compelling and moving in the role, an ordinarily happy wife and mother whose life is suddenly overwhelmed with feelings of raw grief and cool, determined revenge.

That transformation comes when she returns to Nuri’s office, where she left him and Rocco for an evening at a spa with her friend. She finds the road closed off, filled with police and ambulances, and in a sharp moment of realisation, Katja comes to understand that Nuri’s office has been bombed. Akin’s camera sticks close to Katja as the news progressively worsens that night. A few hours later the Hamburg police are informing her, with mournful formality, that the bodies found on the scene belong to Nuri and Rocco.

Kruger is fiercely compelling, an ordinarily happy wife and mother suddenly overwhelmed with feelings of raw grief and cool, determined revenge

The police assume a drug motive. Nuri had a record for dealing and the cops speculate gangs from Eastern Europe are responsible. Katja is quick to blame this impulse by the authorities to pin the blame on immigrants as reflex racism. In passing she mentions studying German history at university but she doesn’t need to reach into the past to understand the ugly, intolerant forces at work in her country today – being the German-born wife to a Kurdish man, she’s experienced enough prejudice directly.

Almost by instinct she blames the attack on neo-Nazis, recalling a blonde woman who parked her bike next to Nuri’s office in the hours before the explosion. The cops don’t believe her, and Katja, numb with loss, attempts suicide, a bloody business involving razors and a hot bath that Akin films with a kind of dreamy, unreal languor. But a phone call snaps her back to reality: as Katja is drifting out of consciousness her lawyer reveals that a white, German couple with far-right views have been arrested for the murder. Katja’s gut feeling was right.

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What follows is a court case, which Akin films with procedural detachment – even the squeak the chairs make on the floor when the lawyers rise to make a point adds to the atmosphere of uncanny tension. It is the film’s most compelling section.

When the couple are acquitted, the film’s final episode sees Katja follow them to a Greek holiday spot to plot revenge. The ancient Greek dramatists knew all about the elemental tragedy of vengeance – especially as pursued by grieving mothers. But the setting has a further significance: it is with an activist in Greece’s far-right Golden Dawn party that the acquitted couple have taken shelter. The point is clear: don’t think that the violent prejudice we see here is a problem unique to Germany.

In the Fade is in cinemas from June 22

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