The Argentinian Lucia Puenzo is best known for her writing,
but she has directed three feature films. The latest is a brilliantly crafted
story of pure evil based on Puenzo own 2011 novel and about a person who
actually existed. Wakolda (2013) is set in Patagonia in 1960 and involves a
German doctor who befriends a family and accompanies them on a long journey to
a place called Bariloche where Eva (Natalia Oreiro), Enzo (Diego Peretti) and
there children intend to start a new life by reopening a hotel that has been
left to Eva, who her self was raised in its German speaking community. The
property is on the edge of the beautiful Nahual Huapi Lake and very close to a
rather secretive hospital.
Helmut Gregor, the knowledgeable elegant doctor, is their
first paying boarder. He takes a rather unhealthy interest in the family’s
daughter Lilith, (an impressive debut from Florencia Bado who does a great job
of narrating the story) because of her small build, she was born prematurely
and gives the impression of being around eight years old but who is actually
twelve. As time goes on Enzo distrusts Gregor even more when he discovers his
interest in his wife’s pregnancy - whom it turns out is expecting twins. What they are unaware of is the true identity
of their guest. Is he what he seems, what does he enter in his journal, what is
his relationship with the other German’s he meets, what goes on at the hospital
and who are the people that are brought there by a sea plane which lands and
takes off on the lake? It’s not until a local female photographer, who is also
an Israeli agent from Mossad, takes an interest in the hotels guest that the
truth finally comes out.
The film conveys an overall impression of menace that
percolates every single scene. And its
credit to the director that a parallel story that involves Lilith, Enzo and the
German doctor in the design and mass production of identical perfect looking porcelain
dolls (do they all resemble Lilith facially?) also adds to that menace. A lot
of the movies ‘authenticity’ is due to the superb role-playing by Spaniard Alex
Brendemuhl who plays suave German Doctor with an underlying threat that never seems
far from the surface. An extremely
interesting, tense thriller that look’s at the closed German society that
existed in Argentina, a society that guarded it secret’s with pride and vigour.
It is alleged that 6% of Germanys population left Europe at the end of WW2 and
settled in this South American country!
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