
home
| art & architecture | books & cds | dance
| destinations | film | opera | television | theater | archives
The surprise runaway hit film of the 2005 season in Germany, Dani
Levys Go for Zucker, won Lolas (German Oscars) for best film, best
director, and best actor, trumping the internationally acclaimed Downfall. Both films broached long-standing
taboos in German media treatment of subject matter relating to the Holocaust. In Downfall
Bruno Ganz presented a Hitler of human, rather than mythic-monstrous proportions. In
the comedy of manners, Go for Zucker, Dani Levy reintroduces the
long-standing tradition of (pre-Nazi-era) Yiddish humor in German-language stage and film.
Levi enriches his taleand embellishes the joke-tellingby lampooning
contemporary German-Jewish life. The mirthfully awkward reunification of brothers Jakob
(Jackie) and Samuel Zucker becomes a send-up of the sharply contrasting values between
post-reunification East and West Germans, as well as German Gentiles and Jews. (The
original title Alles auf Zucker! is a word play that means both "all bets on
Zucker" as well as "everything sugar-coated.")
Henry Hübchen stars as Jackie Zucker, former sportscaster and East
German media star, an inveterate gambler, liar, and schemer in the grand Yiddish comedy
tradition (familiar to American audiences in the Hollywood tradition of the lovable
rascal, from the Marx Brothers to Mel Brooks and beyond). Indeed, much of Go for Zucker
is a vehicle for Hübchen to explore this character. Jakob Zuckermann may have shed his
Jewish identity when his mother and brother fled to the West in 1961 (when the Berlin Wall
went up), and he may be given to self-pity, having lost fame and fortune, fan base and
career, when the East German system collapsed. Jackie may be a rogue, a two-fisted
drinker, a smart ass, and a pool shark, as well. But he is the complete
menschbig-hearted, resourceful, life-loving, a kind of Berlin-Jewish Zorba the
Greek. As he says of himself, "Im a born player and life is a game."
As it happens, Jackie is up to his ears in debt, his wife has thrown
him out and is threatening divorce, and his son, who is the branch manager of a bank (and
a fastidious individual, that is to say, a sexual virgin), has shown up at Jackies
door with the court bailiff. It seems Jackie missed the payment deadline on a loan of
44,500. And, it seems, he has some financial complications with the Club Central, a
Berlin "establishment" for lonely hearts and unreconstructed East Germans.
Jackie explains to his wife that he is the clubs accountant. (Explanations become
necessary when brother Samuel is discovered finding ecstasy-imbued joy in the arms of the
clubs Palestinian "escort.")
Jackie has resolved to solve his financial problems by entering the
Fifth European Pool tournament and, on his way out the door to compete, a telegram arrives
from Frankfurt. Suddenly, there is also the slightly complicating matter of news of his
mothers death, her will, and certain stipulations surrounding the payout of the
inheritance. Jackie must reconcile with his long-estranged brother Samuel, who lives with
his own family in Frankfurt. It just so happens that brother Samuels family is
strict (well, sort of) orthodox, keeps kosher, and as full of mixed nuts as Jackies
family.
In Berlin, Jackie lives with his gentile wife Marlene. Leading German
actress Hannelore Elsner delivers a strong, on-target performance as the scrappy,
pragmatic survivor of her husbands antics, every bit as creative and irrepressible
in her own way. Daughter Jana (Anja Franke), once daddys little girl, has not been
on speaking terms since she gave birth to Sarah. Everyone assumes son Thomas (Steffen
Groth) is gay, oblivious to Janas relationship with her live-in lesbian lover.
Samuel (Udo Samel) is shorter, stockier, but every bit as stubborn as
Jakob. His big-bosomed, big-hearted wife, Golda, is played by Golda Tencer. Tencer is
considered the "grande dame of Yiddish song," and delivers a memorable
over-the-top performance here. Their dour and self-righteous son, Joshua (Sebastian
Blomberg), will prove to be less orthodox than his firmly clenched facade. Daughter Lilly
(Elena Uhlig), a self proclaimed "princess," has been in law school for ten
years. But she has never let that get in the way of her primary hobby, seducing men.
While some of the sexual taboos presented here may offend American
sensibilities, they are right in line with the madcap, no-sacred-cows approach of this
film. The humor, in both subtle and slapstick varieties, is fast-paced. Audience members
unfamiliar with either contemporary East-West German relations or German-Jewish-Gentile
dynamics may find the film moves rather too quickly as they try to keep up with the
subtitles. But the message comes through mirthfully loud and clearhow much would
anyone risk when taking a gamble for love and life?
- Les Wright