Advertisement

Review: ‘The Notebook’ ★★

Share via

Based on the international bestseller by Agota Kristof, “The Notebook” represented Hungary in the Academy Awards’ foreign-language film competition but failed to garner a nomination.

Director Janos Szasz opens the film in 1944 amid World War II. As her husband heads to the battlefield, a mother (Gyongyver Bognar) entrusts her prepubescent twins (Laszlo and Andras Gyemant) to the care of her estranged mom (Piroska Molnar) — better known in her Hungarian countryside town as “the witch.”

Grandma immediately consigns the twins to menial labor to earn their keep.

After being falsely accused and trounced for theft, the twins turn to self-flagellation and starvation. Perpetually stolid, they seem straight out of “Village of the Damned.”

Advertisement

Not one but two predators attempt to proposition the boys: one a Nazi officer, another a church assistant who happens to champion the arrest of a Jewish shoemaker, the only character with any trace of conscience and humanity.

This cautionary tale certainly has a chilling and timely message of how wars make monsters out of innocent people. But using reductive caricatures — complete with phlegmatic performances — to send that message is perhaps not the best way, because it turns something with modern-day implications into distant allegory.

“The Notebook” - 2 stars

MPAA rating: R (for disturbing violence, sexual content, nudity and language)

Running time: 1:44 minutes

Opens: Friday

Advertisement