THE ODESSA FILE: Blu-ray (Columbia, 1974) Indicator/Powerhouse
Jon Voight
affects a convincing German accent as freelance journalist Peter Miller, the
unlikeliest of Nazi-hunters in director, Ronald Neame’s exquisitely underrated
spy thriller, The Odessa File (1974);
an understated, yet exhilarating and far too overlooked caper, and unlike most,
grounded in a harrowing history with more than a few kernels of truth in its
verisimilitude. Loosely based on Frederick Forsyth’s novel, ‘Odessa’ is an acronym for ‘Organisation der Ehemaligen SS-Angehörigen’
(or Organization of Former Members of the
SS), a grotesque camouflage perpetrated by the Hitler’s high command during
the war and maintained by high-ranking German officials ever since; its sole
purpose - concealing and protecting the former membership, since given new
identities. Revised as a screenplay by Kenneth Ross and George Markstein, The Odessa File relies on the
time-honored revenge tragedy to help along and iron out the more complex
machinations established by Forsyth in the novel. Overall, the movie gets the
finer points right, moodily photographed by cinematographer extraordinaire,
Oswald Morris, whose screen credits also included The Guns of Navarone (1961) and The Spy Who Came In From The Cold (1965); arguably, two of the
finest ‘war-themed’ dramas yet
conceived.
The Odessa File is not in their class, though it
remains a methodically paced ‘actioner’; the suspense in its set pieces not
immediately obvious or perhaps even directly satisfying, achieved in a sort of
self-contained vacuum, often staged in deafening silence to heighten the
tension; always, in service of an all-pervading and world-weary cynicism. Neame
builds upon the novel’s steadily unraveling revelations; a very complex jigsaw
puzzle, its pieces awkwardly fitting together in Miller’s mind as he traverses
the unsmiling byways and dour back alleys of a spookily-lit and very frosty
winter landscape, queerly juxtaposing the contemporary remnants of Germany’s
old-world gemütlichkeit with a rather austere façade devoted to its newfound
faux respectability. It seems no one in postwar Germany wants to be reminded of
the past; least of all, that the horrors perpetuated under the Reich have, for
the most part, been exonerated by a secret organization – and worse – allowed its
most heinous transgressors off scot-free to proliferate and share in this
reborn prosperity.
No, the past is
dead – or rather – should be, as far as ‘some’ in the new Germany are
concerned. And yet, it is the past that will surge ahead once more, on a
collision course, and, with the destiny of two nations – Germany’s and Israel’s
– hanging in the balance. The Odessa
File opens with a prologue in 1963, Mossad informant David Porath (Peter
Jeffrey) debriefed by an Israeli General (Garfield Morgan) of a dreadful plot,
perpetuated by the second President of Egypt, Gamal Abdel Nasser Hussein. If
the launch of 400 missiles containing biological warfare succeeds it will
decimate the population and effectively wipe Israel off the map for good. The
crux of the plan has thus far been delayed only for lack of scientific
engineering to perfect the missile guidance system. Somewhere in Germany a
munitions factory is working hard to complete this technology with scientists
once loyal to Hitler; the plant’s workers wholly unaware of the dark purpose
behind their breakthrough. This premise is retained for the movie. But from
this point on, the movie’s plot is considerably changed from the novel’s;
Miller’s dogmatic pursuit of the real-life ‘Butcher
of Riga’, Eduard Roschmann, who reveled in the torture of thousands placed
under his surveillance, superseding the more global scope of Forsyth’s
international saga. Director, Neame ensures an almost claustrophobic adherence
to this more personalized and very tightly scripted revenge scenario, though
the audience will remain quietly unaware of the misdirection in Miller’s
investigative research for some time.
As a movie, The Odessa File excels as a grittier,
if occasionally uber-slick ‘actioner’; Jon Voight, then the hottie du jour,
riding his crest of fame first established as the naïve Texan-turned-gigolo in Midnight Cowboy (1969) and then, as the
unlikely, meek survivor of a hellish camping expedition in Deliverance (1972). Voight’s appeal in The Odessa File is unusual to say the least; a barely handsome
transformation into inauspiciously elegance as the failed young idealist put to
the ultimate test against a specter from his own past. And as the ‘good German’ Voight lends this alter ego a rather angry impetus;
our misinterpretation of his motivations, as more altruistic than they actually
are, debunked in Miller’s last act confrontation between with Roschmann (played
with particularly sinister and affecting venom by Maximillian Schell). Given
Schell’s ‘super-Nazi’ is barely
glimpsed in flashback and, in the present-day in his re-branded identity as
Josef Kiefel – Herr Direktor of the company manufacturing the missile guidance
systems set to decimate Israel, the penultimate altercation between these two
inside Roschmann’s rather sparsely decorated Schloß, it is saying a great deal
Schell’s presence is felt throughout the picture; perhaps even mirrored in the
eyes of his protective assassins; General Glücks (Hannes Messemer), who pushes
Miller in front of an oncoming subway train, and, Gustav Mackensen (Klaus
Löwitsch), setting a murderous trap for Miller inside Klaus Wenzer’s (Derek
Jacobi) photographic studio. While the former plot to assassinate Miller is
good for the thirty-second startle - everyone on the platform goes into shell shock,
even Miller’s girlfriend, Sigi (Mary Tamm) unprepared for his split-second
survival from certain death – the latter conflict, staged between Miller and
Mackensen is a skillfully protracted ‘fight sequence’; memorable for its
all-pervading silence and ended with Mackensen’s plummet through a glass
ceiling, impaled on a metal spike in Wenzer’s workroom.
After the
aforementioned prologue in Israel, The
Odessa File begins with an off-kilter lighthearted touch; Peter Miller
driving through Hamburg, its streets generously decorated for the pending
Christmas holidays; news of President Kennedy’s death reaching Miller via a
radio broadcast, interpolated with Perry Como’s effervescent carol, ‘Christmas Dream’. Derailed in his thoughts by a passing
ambulance and several police cars, Miller tails the emergency traffic to a
downtrodden neighborhood. He attempts to enter the scene using his press pass.
Denied access, Miller next makes a play for Inspector Karl Braun (Gunnar
Möller), an invaluable contact and good friend besides. But Braun encourages
Miller to forget about it. Meanwhile, the body of aged holocaust survivor,
Salomon Tauber (Towje Kleiner), who presumably gassed himself, is removed from a
nearby apartment. We retreat momentarily to the cluttered abode Miller shares
with Sigi – a topless dancer at a ‘respectable’ gentlemen’s club. Already there
are cracks in their relationship; she, preferring a real home and hinting at marriage,
while he is completely comfortable with the status quo.
The next
afternoon, Braun asks Miller to lunch, offering up the private diary recovered
from Tauber’s apartment. Very soon, this densely packed recollection of the war
becomes Miller’s all-consuming passion. Sigi is mildly put off by this
obsession with the manuscript. Indeed, it frequently leaves Miller despondent.
Via Miller’s imagination, we experience several flashbacks derived from
Tauber’s accounts; Solomon and his wife, Esther (Miriam Mahler) separated at
Riga concentration camp. Miller also learns of an altercation described in the
journal, in which Roschmann, eager to elude incarceration for war crimes, shot
to death a Wehrmacht Captain (Joachim Dietmar Mues) who refused to allow him
safe conduct. These episodes do more than contextualize the Nazi brutalities
endured at the camps. To better comprehend the lingering impact of the past,
Miller consults his widowed mother (Maria Schell) who regales him with tearful
memories of his father. These only serve to crystalize Miller’s resolve. Now,
he contacts Tauber’s friend, Herr Marx (Martin Brandt); a forlorn shell of a
man and learns from him that Tauber ran into Roschmann as recently as three
weeks earlier; shocked to discover his old adversary thriving in the new
Germany as a businessman of some stature. At this point, Braun nervously asks
Miller for the return of Tauber’s diary. He never expected Miller would make it
his all-consuming passion.
Miller next
makes an inquiry at the Attorney General’s Office, his casual questioning of a
secretary thwarted by an officious, though not terribly clever lawyer (Georg
Marischka) who has interrupted Miller to take a phone call about a meeting of
the Division Siegfried; a not so secret society of ex-SS officers, plotting yet
again to take over Germany with their particular brand of hatred. After Miller
crashes the affair and gets a sincere taste of this sinister troop’s mantra, he
is identified by the lawyer, escorted from the hall and beaten to a pulp by loyalists
to General Glücks (Hannes Messemer) who now informs his cronies President
Kennedy’s death has merely stalled an arms agreement between their two nations
that President Johnson will likely put into effect within less than three
months. The situation is critical. Germany’s guided missile system must be
perfected and placed in the hands of the Egyptian government before then, thus
ensuring their biological warfare against Israel will succeed. Glucks sends Gen. Griefer (Günter Meisner) to
take care of matters. Griefer tails Miller and Sigi while they are Christmas
shopping, pushing Miller off a subway platform in front of an oncoming train to
his certain death, leaving Sigi inconsolable. As fate would have it, Miller has
the reflexes of a jungle cat, rolling out of the way of the oncoming train,
wedged between it and the tracks until help can arrive; his life, mercifully
spared.
Recognizing the
situation as critical, Miller makes another contact: famed Nazi-hunter, Simon
Wiesenthal (Schmuel Rodensky) who provides him with much relevant information
about ODESSA, the secret organization responsible for cloaking the sins of a
goodly number of former SS officers, setting them up with new identities and
professions in which they continue their work, while secretly undermining the
new Germany. After the war, ODESSA began an aggressive campaign to infiltrate
virtually every facet of modern life. While their influence is global, with
prosperous satellites in the Middle East and South America, their base of
operations remains in Germany. At his hotel, Miller is confronted by Dr.
Schmidt, another of the organization’s associates. The meeting is cordial, but
the message is clear. It would not benefit Miller’s good health to pursue his
investigation of Roschmann any further. It does not take long for Schmidt’s
prophecy to be realized…ironically, not by ODESSA’s henchmen, but by Porath
who, together with Mossad operative, Alfred Oster (Kurt Meisel), devise a
devious plan for Miller to impersonate one of the SS’s own and infiltrate their
organization from the inside. Sufficiently aged with makeup and hair dye,
Miller is sent to Austria and thoroughly cross-examined by the organization’s
Franz Bayer (Noel Willman). Outwardly, Bayer believes Miller’s story and takes
his false identity at face value, sending him to be photographed for another
fake passport by one of their lesser operatives, Klaus Wenzer. But in Germany,
Werner Deilman (Ernst Schröder) has hired the assassin, Gustav Mackensen to put
an end to Miller’s charade posthaste.
Arriving at
Wenzer’s print shop first, Miller endeavors to have his picture taken. Instead,
he is informed it will take a few days’ time to locate a suitable photographer
for the job. In the meantime, Mackensen arrives, ordering Wenzer to telephone
Miller in the dead of night to shoot the photo. Planning to murder Miller upon
his midnight rendezvous with a silenced pistol, Miller instead thwarts the
attempted assassination, struggling with Mackensen and driving the hired gun to
the rooftops. The men struggle to maintain their footing. Mackensen loses his
and plummets to his death through the glass ceiling, impaled on a large metal
spike in Wenzer’s workroom. In Wenzer’s safe, Miller discovers ‘the Odessa file’; a detailed account of
the secret organization, complete with photographs of virtually all its key
operatives. The file is hidden by Miller in a safety deposit box; the key given
to Sigi with instructions that if he should not return, she is to recover the
documents and turn them over to the ‘legitimate’ police. Learning of
Roschmann’s second identity, as Josef Kiefel, Miller tails Roschmann to his
remote castle and, at gunpoint, gets the semi-retired Nazi to confess
everything. What follows is some of the most blood-curdling exposition in the
entire movie, expertly relayed by Maximillian Schell whose alter-ego is an
unrepentant gross pig of a human being.
Roschmann has
erroneously assumed Miller is on a crusade to rid Germany of the
war-mongering/Jew-hating Nazi devil. Only now Miller confesses the true nature
of his showdown; he is the son of the Captain murdered so long ago when
Roschmann sought to make a quick escape by boat at the end of the war. Perhaps
implicitly realizing he has no ‘out’ from Miller’s revenge scenario, Roschmann
takes dead aim with a hidden pistol in a feeble bid to kill Miller. He is
instead hastily dispatched by Miller, who ruthlessly pumps three bullets into
Roschmann’s chest. In the movie’s epilogue we learn Miller served three months
for his ‘crime’, though he was never formally charged; the whole affair quietly
swept under the rug. As the truth of the organization becomes public around the
world and an obvious embarrassment to ‘the new’ Germany, the government is
strong-armed into arresting virtually all of ODESSA’s key members, ultimately
prosecuted for war crimes. We see Miller fulfilling a promise to the late
Tauber who, in his memoirs, inquired if anyone cared enough about the plight of
one old Jew to avenge the injustices perpetrated on so many during WWII. Miller
is seen with Marx in Israel, quietly observing as Marx offers a prayer for
Tauber’s immortal soul.
The second and
third acts of The Odessa File – the
movie – are almost a complete revision of Frederick Forsyth’s novel. In the
book, Miller's identity is compromised by his persistence to drive his own
sports car – a vehicle his alter ego could never afford. Members of ODESSA,
plant a bomb under the front seat. Mercifully, the car’s stiff suspension
precludes the bomb from detonating. The
penultimate confrontation between Miller and Roschmann does not end with Miller
killing his nemesis, but rather with Miller handcuffing Roschmann to a
fireplace with plans to have him arrested and prosecuted. Alas, Miller is
ambushed and knocked unconscious by Roschmann’s bodyguard who unwittingly
detonates the bomb while driving Miller’s sports car to get help. Roschmann
vanishes into thin air, presumably to Argentina. An unnamed hit man, sent to
murder Miller is instead killed by Josef who swears Miller to silence for his
complicity in their plan. Roschmann’s German technologies factory is shuttered
and eventually destroyed, the plot to decimate Israel with biological weapons
narrowly averted. Josef, who is in fact Major Uri ben Shaul, of Israeli army
intelligence, takes Tauber’s diary home to Israel, a holy man reciting Kaddish
for Salomon Tauber’s immortal soul.
While one may
argue the concisions and excisions made in Kenneth Ross and Georg Markstein’s
screenplay have only served to tighten the narrative structure and keep what is
already an extremely complex plot more narrowly focused on its central figure
of heroism – Peter Miller – one cannot help but find the alterations wan ghost
flowers to Forsyth’s original grand plan, their hasty resolution falling into
the category of clumsily stitched together and near clichéd finales meant to
satisfy audiences rather than serve art. It is one of the divine ironies of
humanity that history – good, bad or indifferent – rightfully refuses to fade
into obscurity; stirred in Miller’s mind by the unlikeliest kismet; a chance
delay at a streetlight in the seedy end of Hamburg while listening to the
radio. How fickle is fate to stir a reporter’s curiosity with the sudden
appearance of an ambulance and several police cars racing to a dingy little
apartment. As is often the case, big things have little beginnings. But in the
case of The Odessa File, little
things remain terribly convoluted for long stretches, despite director, Ronald
Neame’s best intention to roll out a finely wrought tale of espionage and
corruption at the highest levels of government.
The primary flaw
with The Odessa File is its
variegated machinations are built around its star. While ODESSA is made up of
the intrigues of a well-oiled and all-pervasive association of wicked usurpers;
heroism herein becomes the exclusive domain of one man’s crusade to expose the
truth. Jon Voight delivers a thoroughly credible and occasionally brilliant
performance with an impeccable German accent to boot. But he is weighted down
by the pressures of his star-billing. Remember, it’s only a movie and a
Hollywood one at that; ergo, nothing bad ever happens to the star, diffusing
the ticking time bomb of the narrative considerably. Hence the exercise of
exposing ODESSA to the world at large becomes almost academic, and certainly,
at times extremely clinical; meticulously thought out and superbly paced by
director, Ronald Neame, right down to the last detail, but with far too much
stolidity to ever get any real suspense off the ground. The penultimate
showdown between Roschmann and Miller is the tour de force of the picture,
crackling with Maximillian Schell’s penchant for achieving a sort of sadist’s
eloquence. Even at gunpoint, Roschmann is more amused than terrorized by
Miller’s petulance - until he discovers the real reason for his sneak attack –
revenge…always a dish best served cold. And in this moment, Neame seems to be
drawing parallels between Schell’s cultured degenerate and Miller’s less than
altruistic pursuit of the truth.
Miller’s brutal
dispatch of Roschmann makes the circle complete; Miller, having transgressed
and, in fact, betrayed his father’s legacy by reacting to evil with evil, and
thus having more than a little of it ‘rub off’ on him in the process. In the
last analysis, The Odessa File is a
flawed and ever so slightly ill-favored affair. It lacks the satisfaction of
seeing unequivocal goodness triumph, perhaps because, like the novel, it
largely trades in the tonalities of a very murky past where polar opposites
cannot and do not exist. Such is life too, even if it never stops the
daydreamer from his/her hallucinations to find meaning in the incomprehensible.
Movies, however, function on more succinct plains of pleasure. There are no
‘winners’ in The Odessa File; no
champions to withstand these winds of change. It all boils down to this; the
holocaust and its aftermath were and remain imperfect chapters in an inhumane
history, and nothing on God’s green earth will ever ably smooth over the jagged
edges of its terrific nightmare. The Odessa File makes valiant strides to
suggest one man can ultimately make a difference. Peter Miller affects positive
change – yes. But he is marginally tainted by the end of that journey; revenge,
having exacted its pound of flesh as a disease of the heart, mind and soul,
still never to be satisfied.
Back in an era
when Image Entertainment stood for something, Sony Entertainment farmed out The Odessa File to its third-party
distribution rather than market the movie under their studio banner. The
results, as with most any 1080p transfer Sony has endeavored to offer up, were
exceptional. These same 2K remastered archival elements have now been handed
over to U.K. distributor, Indicator/Powerhouse for another ‘region free’
release of the film on Blu-ray. As before, colors are vibrant. The image is
razor-sharp without appearing to have suffered from any untoward digital
tinkering. Flesh tones are very accurate. Grain appears indigenous to its
source and contrast levels are bang on spectacular. Bottom line: Sony’s motto
of ‘quality first’ is, as always, to
be highly commended. What we have here is a hi-def transfer worthy of the best.
There are only one or two transitional dissolves that bear a sudden softening
of the image and it is doubtful anything more could have been done to ‘correct’
these brief intrusions. The 2.0 mono audio is adequate for this presentation;
everything front and center, but with occasionally distinguished spatiality.
Perry Como’s ‘Christmas Dream’, as
example, sounds marvelous. Andrew Lloyd Webber’s underscore becomes a tad too
bombastic to be taken seriously during Miller’s confrontation with Mackensen.
But otherwise, Webber’s work compliments the visuals immensely.
Where the
Indicator/Powerhouse release bests the retired Image Blu-ray is in the extras. We
get just a little over 2 hrs. of audio-only BFI interviews; 67 min. with Ronald
Neame and 62 with his cinematographer, Oswald Morris. These are comprehensive to
say the least, richly mined for back story and history that most every
collector will find fascinating. Indicator also provides two new extras; interviews
with stuntman, Vic Armstrong and continuity supervisor, Elaine Schreyeck. Cumulatively,
these barely total 10 min. There’s also
something called the Super 8 version that, at 17 mins. is a cut-down home
cinema presentation of the actual movie. Don’t ask! This, plus an original theatrical trailer and
image gallery, plus superbly put together booklet of essays by Carmen Gray,
Keith Johnston, and, Ronald Neame, collectively provide a fairly comprehensive overview
of the picture and its critical response. As with all Indicator titles, this
one is limited to 3000 copies. So, if you do not already own The Odessa File you will want to snatch
this one up for posterity. Bottom line: recommended!
FILM RATING (out of 5 – 5 being the best)
3.5
VIDEO/AUDIO
4
EXTRAS
3.5
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