Reconstruction (film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Reconstruction
Directed by Irene Lusztig
Release date(s) 2001
Running time 90 min.
Language English, Hebrew and French and Romanian with subtitles
IMDb profile

Reconstruction is a 2001 documentary made by Irene Lusztig that investigates the Ioanid Gang bank heist committed in 1959 in Communist Romania. The film focuses on Monica Sevianu, Lusztig's grandmother, and the only female involved in the heist.

The documentary gets its name from an antisemitic propaganda film that was made by the Romanian government three years after the robbery was committed. The original Reconstruction was a strange blend of documentary and fiction, where the criminals played themselves in a crime-film whose plot was driven by clues that self-congratulatory detectives pieced together. The propaganda film was only screened to journalists and high ranking communist officials before being buried beneath government files. Lusztig managed to find a copy and incorporates clips into her documentary.

Contents

[edit] Summary

Exploring her dark family secret, Lusztig blends Romania's history with her personal history. Modern footage of Bucharest, news clips from the postwar era, and personal family interviews are complied in order to make sense of her grandmother's criminal behavior. But, unlike a typical crime-thriller, the real-life criminal is complicated and can't be fully understood from a few pieces of evidence and an extorted confession.

By 1959 it was clear that the utopia communism had promised Romania was not going to be a reality. Antisemitism, which had been boiling since before the war, continued to pose as a threat, and the suspicion and distrust of the communist age effected the entire nation. Monica and her husband Gugu, who also participated in the robbery, had been communist supporters who were abandoned and abused by the government as soon as it came to power.

Lusztig's documentary speculates that government's oppression and antisemitism encouraged their criminal behavior. Having given up on their hopes for a government they believed in, Monica and her husband turned to adventure and pleasure seeking. With the money she stole, before her arrest, Monica bought a pleated gray skirt and an orange angora sweater. Material pleasures offered happiness and certainty that the government had taken from her.

With a tone of uncertainty Lusztig tries to sort through the rumors that surround the crime in hopes of discovering what really happened. Were the criminals going to give the money to poor Jews in their community? Were they going to fly away and escape to Israel? Or, perhaps, was the crime staged by the communist government to encourage antisemitism? Surprises and twists unfold in the process to unveil the truth.

[edit] Production

  • Lusztig was eleven or twelve-years-old when her mother told her about her grandmother's dark past. Before then, it had remained a well kept secret. Lusztig did not know her grandmother. She only met her twice. She says her inspiration for constructing a film around an absent female protagonist came from German writer Heinrich Böll in his novel "Group Portrait With Lady." [1]
  • Lusztig's editing and filming draws from Dusan Makavejev, believing that a filmmaker should trust his/her intuition and can make connections between seemingly unconnected images. [1]

[edit] Film festivals and awards

Reconstruction was screeened at a number of film festivals including:

Reconstruction received the following awards:

[edit] Reception

Reconstruction received praise from the Boston Phoenix, Variety, and film scholars at Harvard and Berkley. It has been hailed as "an example of personal documentary at its best." [2]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b
  2. ^ Lusztig, Irene. Reconstruction. Women Make Movies. Retrieved on 13 August.

[edit] References

[edit] See also

[edit] Documentaries about other singular Jewish women

[edit] External links