Film Review: ‘The Book Thief’ Fails to Find Tone of Familiar Story

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CHICAGO – Brian Percival’s “The Book Thief,” from the hit book by Markus Zusak, is a well-intentioned piece of work that nonetheless fails, sometimes spectacularly, to connect in the ways that its creators intend. Tonally adrift between something clearly aimed at young adults and something much darker and more cynical about the nature of man and the afterlife, the film is only carried at all by the strengths of its talented leads – Geoffrey Rush, Emily Watson, and the remarkable Sophie Nelisse. Try as they may, these talented performers can’t overcome the overall work’s notable flaws, even if one senses that the hearts of all involved are in the right place.

HollywoodChicago.com Oscarman rating: 2.0/5.0
Rating: 2.0/5.0

Zusak’s book was narrated by Death himself and Percival and his team make the daring move of keeping a lot of that narration intact. So “The Book Thief” opens with a the voice of Death (Roger Allam) noting how he rarely notices humans as he’s doing his job but how one – a girl named Liesel (Sophie Nelisse) – stood out on the day he killed her brother. It sets a dark and yet almost whimsical tone. Even the death of a child is just something that happens. And Zusak and Percival set the tone that this will not be a typical story of WWII Germany in presenting that unique way of looking at (and hearing from) death. The problem is that “The Book Thief” does become a relatively typical story of personal triumph in a time of tragedy and that opening scene is never really fulfilled upon.

StarRead Brian Tallerico’s full review of “The Book Thief” in our reviews section.

Liesel is adopted by the kindly Hans (Rush) and strict Rosa (Watson). Her new father encourages her to read and write, playing accordion late at night after a few too many drinks. Her new mother encourages proper behavior, seeming like the kind of person who doesn’t like to draw too much attention in the small German town in which they live. When Nazi furor begins to grow and the town stages a book burning in the middle of the square, Liesel tries to rescue one of the burning books, seeing the value in the written word that the ignorant do not. She draws the attention of a local rich woman named Ilsa (Barbara Auer), the wife of an SS official, who encourages her to sneak into her library and steal books for what she thinks is just a personal collection.

Meanwhile, Max (Ben Schnetzer), a Jewish refugee whose father was a friend of Hans, arrives at their doorstep, looking for shelter and safety. As the rise of Nazi Germany happens around them, Liesel and Max form a friendship in that basement, defying Hitler’s cries and seeking humanity not often seen in films about this part of the world in World War II. Of course, tragedy will come to this inconsequential German home as it did to so many of them in this part of the world in the ‘30s and ‘40s.

StarContinue reading for Brian Tallerico’s full “The Book Thief” review.

“The Book Thief” stars Sophie Nelisse, Geoffrey Rush, Emily Watson, Barbara Auer, Ben Schnetzer, Nico Liersch, and Roger Allam. It was adapted by Michael Petroni and directed by Brian Percival. It opens in Chicago on November 15, 2013.

The Book Thief
The Book Thief
Photo credit: Fox

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