I spent much of lockdown reading and revisiting the collected works of Clive James, and I was struck by just how forcefully the Holocaust was imprinted on the writing and thoughts of even an Australian who reached Europe relatively late in the 20th century. James, though, was of a generation that remembered, in large part because they were close enough to these atrocities - chronologically, psychically, spiritually - but also because they had texts like Resnais' film around to prompt and prod them into remembering. We, by contrast, exist in a strange, complex place and time where we are at every waking moment surrounded by all the information in the world, and are accordingly distracted to the point of forgetfulness. Seventy years later, Night and Fog still jolts, loaded as it was with imagery that cuts through our rather rote and childproofed comprehension of the camps: the gaze of a patient in a sick bay, half-desperate, half-crazed; the charred bodies left behind on pyres like firewood; a basket of severed heads. (Which is to say there are segments that go beyond documentation and into the realms of abject horror, that there are sights here you cannot forget and will take with you to your own grave.) Somewhere in the journey from there to here, Night and Fog fell out of circulation: after some thirty years of film-watching, I only stumbled across it in a far-flung corner of the Internet. The short is anti-commercial; our censor boards wouldn't know what to do with it; and there may not be a 21st century trigger warning big enough to cover the Holocaust. Yet it vividly haunts later texts made by those who did see it. Claude Lanzmann was to expand Resnais' field of study into Shoah and subsequent documentaries, striving to cover the same ground in as much nuts-and-bolts detail as he could, while Night and Fog's brief tour of a kapo's villa foresees The Zone of Interest, today's most provocative and sobering reminder of the evils of Nazism (and thus the evils of man). The usual caveat applies - how much importance you want to attach to something as trifling as mere moving pictures - but there may never have been a more important film in the entire history of cinema.
Night and Fog is now streaming via watchdocumentaries.com.
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