arts & life f i lm Martin Landau an d Christopher Plummer star in Remember. Remember Michael Fox | Special to the Jewish News Memory and revenge are intertwined in a new film by Atom Egoyan. Christopher Plummer S eventy years after the liberation of the camps, the number of Holocaust sur- vivors grows smaller every day. The good news? The ranks of Nazi crimi- nals who escaped prosecution and raised families in comfort are likewise shrinking. These phenomena on the periphery of con- temporary life are foregrounded in Remember — which opened last week in Metro Detroit — a perversely mordant and ultimately pro- vocative thriller directed by the Canadian filmmaker Atom Egoyan from a deceptively clever script by Benjamin August. A moral parable cloaked — somewhat improbably, given the advanced age and fail- ing health of its protagonist — in the trap- pings of a revenge saga and a road movie, Remember presents the viewer with a slew of philosophical questions. What is the value or significance of admin- istering “justice” so long after the original events? Who experiences satisfaction from its application, and what kind of satisfaction? Does the presumably righteous act of pur- suing justice for the great crimes of yesterday justify inflicting harm on innocent people today? Should the sins of the father be visited on the son (or the generation after)? Does justice matter if the evil, the injuries and the suffering slip from memory? Finally, how much of our identity depends on our memory? Rabbis, start your engines. Christopher Plummer carries the film as Zev Guttman, an elderly nursing home resi- dent with worsening symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease. The silver lining of his memory loss, to the degree there is one, is that Zev is spared some grieving for the recent death of his wife. Zev has a grown son, but he defers more to the ministrations of his friend and neighbor, Max Rosenbaum (Martin Landau). A physi- cally frail but mentally sharp man with a plan, Max figures a way to spring Zev from their facility on a mission of revenge. Max and Zev survived the same concentra- tion camp, you see, and they had agreed (back when Zev still had all his faculties) that he would find and kill the Nazi officer respon- sible for murdering their families. This dubi- ous plan remained on hold, however, as long as Zev’s wife was alive. Now, on the road, Zev is equipped with just a black dopp kit and a lengthy, handwritten memo from Max detailing every train and bus connection and hotel stay. (It’s remarkable what shut-ins can arrange these days, with the help of the Internet.) Zev’s most challenging task, early on, is to buy a gun. A codger with a serious weapon and a bad memory provides ample oppor- tunity for dark humor as well as suspense, especially when Zev navigates back and forth across the Canadian-U.S. border. It’s the rare viewer who isn’t rooting for Zev to get through customs unhindered. The film- makers take much pleasure in encouraging this response, and in inviting us to contem- plate our definition of — and zeal for — “jus- tifiable homicide.” In another nod to intelligent, self-aware viewers, the screenplay ruefully includes a few lines suggesting the general obliviousness of the average person to the Holocaust. Like it or not, the world has moved on. The idea of being ignored or condescended to is familiar to people above a certain age, of course. It is implicit in Plummer’s fine per- formance, which encompasses dignity, denial and humiliation. All of which is to say that Remember skill- fully and deliberately enlists us in Zev’s quest for revenge. That is, until a blast of violence pitches the movie onto another plane alto- gether. It should be noted that Atom Egoyan, known for his fondness for fragmented storytelling and complicated time shifts — deployed to brilliant effect in his 1997 mas- terpiece The Sweet Hereafter — takes a linear, chronological approach in Remember. Do not be lulled, however, for there is more here than meets the eye. * March 24 • 2016 45