The Globe and Mail - 19.10.2019

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| ARTS

T


aika Waititi can’t stop talk-
ing about his pants. It is two
days after the world pre-
miere of Waititi’s “anti-hate sat-
ire”Jojo Rabbitat the Toronto In-
ternational Film Festival, and the
New Zealand filmmaker is under-
going the obligatory ritual of
meeting, greeting and dismissing
journalists inside a well-appoint-
ed downtown hotel suite. But be-
fore any interview takes place, he
needs to adjust his trousers. Im-
mediately.
“One pant leg is longer than
the other, isn’t it?” he asks, just as
I enter the room. Or maybe his
question is directed to the two
public-relations representatives
sitting nearby. Or maybe no one
at all. I suggest that perhaps the
sartorial dilemma rests with the
way his pants are sitting on his
hips. He shoots a cocked-eyebrow
glare which indicates that I have
said either the weirdest or the stu-
pidest thing to ever be uttered
about such a piece of clothing.
Whatever the case, the pant-leg
shtick acts as a tidy introduction
to the many sides of Taika Waititi:
style icon, jester, self-knowing ec-
centric.
But even the most carefully tai-
lored pair of pants won’t help
Waititi escape the fall movie sea-
son without personal discomfort.
Such is the case when you write
and direct a comedy such asJojo
Rabbit, which follows a young
Second World War-era German
boy and his imaginary friend,


who just happens to be Adolf Hit-
ler. Doubly so when you decide to
play the Fuhrer himself, as Waititi
does here.
And whileJojo Rabbitended up
leaving TIFF as a potential Oscars
contender, winning over a swath
of critics and the festival’s coveted
People’s Choice Award, its theat-
rical release this weekend should
ignite the hot-take discourse cycle
all over again.
Here, the increasingly busy
Waititi, who’s about to start
shooting the soccer comedyNext
Goal Winsbefore heading back to
the Marvel Cinematic Universe
withThor: Love and Thunder, talks
with me about expectations, his-
tory and what is and isn’t satire.

Hownervouswereyouinbringing
JojotoTIFFforitsworldpremiere?
It’sasubjectthatnoteveryoneis
obviouslycomfortablewith...

Without sounding arrogant, I
don’t get nervous any more. And
I’m starting to get worried about
that. What makes me feel good
about what I’m working on is
when I start getting nervous and
anxious of how it’ll be taken. But
this is my sixth film, and I feel
now that I know my sensibilities,
my tone. And I know how much
work I’ve put into it. I’ve worked
on this film since 2011, and for me,
it didn’t feel like I was taking a
massive risk by presenting this
story. This is by no means the first
satire or the first film to lambaste
Hitler and the Nazis. It would be
different if this was from the oth-
er point of view, of me trying to
say, “You guys, let’s take into con-
sideration what was going on
with the Nazis, okay?” If I was do-
ing that, yeah, I’d be nervous. But
this is me continuing the conver-
sation that’s been going on since
1930.

You’reconfidentinyoursensibil-
ities,butareyouconfidentinthe

audiences’awarenessofthose
sensibilities?Asin,everyone
knowswhattoexpectfromaTaika
Waititifilmnow?

No, but that’s not my job. I used to
be a painter, and what drove me
away from that was this ridicu-
lous concept of people having to
read a five-page dissertation on
what a painting is about without
just letting an audience see a
painting and judge it, and let the
art speak for itself. That’s what I
hope my films do. I don’t want to
tell an audience beforehand that
this is what you can expect. That
sounds apologetic. For me, you’ve
either seen my films and under-
stand that they’re all the same,
tone-wise – and that they deal
with the same things, which is
family and love and that they
have an uplifting side to them and
messages of hope – or you

haven’t. In which case: Buy the
box set.

Youspentyour20sinBerlin.How
doyouthinkthisfilmwouldbe
received[there]today?

If anyone knows how to acknowl-
edge what’s happened, it’s the
Germans. They have put a lot of
effort in continuing the conversa-
tion. Every child is reminded and
educated on what happened,
probably to the point where a lot
of kids grow up having this guilt
or shame for something that hap-
pened 80 years ago. But it’s vital
that they learn, and that’s what
this film is about: continuing to
educate people, and ensuring it
never happens again.

Soyou’resatirizingormaking
Hitlerabuffoonhere,whichisnota
newidea,it’sbeendonesincethe

forties.Whydoyouthinkaudi-
encesneedanewinterpretationof
that?

It’s not enough to say Hitler was
an idiot or a buffoon, because I
don’t think that’s as effective as
showing him as a buffoon. That’s
why we have caricature. And even
though he’s dead, if you can show
that face and show that ridiculous
outfit and moustache, it’s the
same effect as showing how ridic-
ulous [Donald] Trump is. It’s not
enough to say, “I don’t like this
particular person or his ideas.”
The way comedy works is, to sati-
rize, you have to show them or a
version of them. And with, in this
movie, with Jojo not having a fa-
ther and him trying to find a fa-
ther figure and mixing him with
his idol, Hitler, that felt like a new
and inventive way of telling a sto-
ry. So we have it from that kid’s
point of view. Without an imagi-
nary Hitler, it wouldn’t be quite
the same.

Themarketingforthisfilmisthat
it’san“anti-hatesatire.”ButI’m
curiouswhereyouseetheline
betweencomedyandsatire.What
doyoufeelyou’resatirizinghere?

I think there’s a long tradition of
satirizing anything – the estab-
lishment, we’ll call it – and come-
dy has been the biggest tool for
that. The only real way to attack
ideas and attack regimes is when
you’re making of fun of people,
mimicking them or satirizing
them. For some reason, that’s the
thing that drives people the cra-
ziest: being made fun of. That’s
why Trump gets so out of control
and spends all day on Twitter re-
sponding to people who troll him.
His confidence is that messed up
that he feels that instead of run-
ning the country, he has to re-
spond to people who make fun of
him on social media.

ButI’mwondering,inmyideaof
satire,there’sanaspectofpointing
thefingerbackattheaudience.Of
directlyimplyingthattheyshould
wakeupabit.Doyouseethat
here?

I think you get the idea that it’s
our responsibility to ... I keep say-
ing this, but to continue the con-
versation. It’s our responsibility
to educate not only ourselves but
also new generations. There’s a
kind of laziness that opens the
doors to breed these hate crimes
and atrocities and eventually
wars. It wigs me out that, recently,
they did a poll and something like
44 per cent of American millen-
nials didn’t know what Auschwitz
was. That is not good enough.

You’retalkingaboutshowingthe
Nazisasfoolsandhorriblepeople,
butIwanttoaskaboutSamRock-
well’scharacter–aNaziwhoturns
outtobesomethingofagood
person.Wereyouconcernedabout
showingbothsides...

“Some very fine people on both
sides”? Yeah, no, but there were.
There were career soldiers who
fought for Germany who weren’t
Nazis. They were patriots and
should’ve known better than to
be supporting that regime, but as
we know from the stories like the
Valkyrie Operation that there
were people who knew what he
was doing were wrong and were
trying to get rid of him. There
were Germans helping Jews es-
cape. I don’t think that in any
country in the world, 100 per cent
of the people are evil, as we know.
So I think that Sam’s character
does have that complexity.

Thisinterviewhasbeencondensed
andedited.

JojoRabbitopensOct.25inToronto
beforeexpandingtootherCanadian
citiesNov.1.

ContinuingtheconversationwithTaikaWaititi


JojoRabbitdirector


discussesHitlerthe


buffoon,hisideaof


satireandwhetheror


nottherewere‘veryfine


peopleonbothsides’


BARRYHERTZ


FilmmakerTaikaWaititi–seenattheEuropeanpremiereofJojoRabbitinLondonearlierthismonth–wrote,
directedandco-starsinthefilm.HeplaysayoungSecondWorldWar-eraGermanboy’simaginaryfriend
–whojusthappenstobeAdolfHitler.SIMONDAWSON/REUTERS
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