Rent The Look of Silence (2014)

3.9 of 5 from 195 ratings
1h 38min
Rent The Look of Silence Online DVD & Blu-ray Rental
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Synopsis:
Through Joshua Oppenheimer's work filming perpetrators of the Indonesian genocide, a family of survivors discovers how their son was murdered and the identity of the men who killed him. The youngest brother is determined to break the spell of silence and fear under which the survivors live, and so confronts the men responsible for his brother's murder - something unimaginable in a country where killers remain in power.
Actors:
Directors:
Producers:
Andre Singer, Signe Byrge Sørensen, Werner Herzog, Errol Morris
Writers:
Joshua Oppenheimer
Others:
Joshua Oppenheimer
Studio:
Dogwoof
Genres:
Documentary
Awards:

2014 Venice Film Festival Grand Jury Prize

BBFC:
Release Date:
12/10/2015
Run Time:
98 minutes
Languages:
English Dolby Digital 5.1, Indonesian, Indonesian Dolby Digital 5.1
Subtitles:
None
DVD Regions:
Region 2
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Widescreen 1.78:1 / 16:9
Colour:
Colour
Bonus:
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • Directors Q&A with Adi and Louis Theroux
  • Berlinale Q&A footage with Herzog
  • Indonesian Premiere
  • EPK interview Featurette
  • Commentary with Errol Morris
BBFC:
Release Date:
12/10/2015
Run Time:
98 minutes
Languages:
English Dolby Digital 5.1, Indonesian Dolby Digital 5.1
Subtitles:
None
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Widescreen 1.78:1 / 16:9
Colour:
Colour
BLU-RAY Regions:
B
Bonus:
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • Directors Q&A with Adi and Louis Theroux
  • Berlinale Q&A footage with Herzog
  • Indonesian Premiere
  • EPK interview Featurette
  • Commentary with Errol Morris

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Reviews (2) of The Look of Silence

An excellent but harrowing documentary - The Look of Silence review by Philip in Paradiso

Spoiler Alert
20/03/2018

The film documents the 1965 massacre of Communists or Communist sympathizers in Indonesia through the eyes of one man whose family was targeted by the killers. Many of the victims were not Communists at all. The scale of the violence was such that it could be termed a genocide. Britain and the USA supported the genocidal killers, and, in fact, they are still, broadly speaking, in power in Indonesia today.

It will unsettle and shock you, but it should be seen. It could be called: "A study in Evil".

2 out of 2 members found this review helpful.

Everyone should see this - The Look of Silence review by MC

Spoiler Alert
26/07/2016

It's hard to put into words just how shocking this documentary is. Never has the saying "the banality of evil" been so abundantly demonstrated than in the words of actions of those Indonesians who took part in the 1965, or their friends and family who are so dismissive, so unwilling to face the truth. What I found most uncomfortable is that the people who are ultimately responsible for the murder of approximately one million people are still in power in Indonesia, and that the governments of the US, UK and Australia were complicit in these murders. This last fact is not established in the film but has been the conclusion of a recent independent tribunal. Nevertheless, there will be no Indonesian Nuremberg, no trial in The Hague. That in itself is what is most appalling.

I must pay tribute to the surviving brother who unflinchingly confronts those responsible for his brother's brutal, inhuman murder with preternatural equanimity and restraint, even though the anguish, torment and rage are etched in his every expression. I could not have shown such diplomacy in the presence of people for whom mass murder is an act of patriotic duty.

1 out of 1 members found this review helpful.

Critic review

The Look of Silence review by Mark McPherson - Cinema Paradiso

There’s a very chilling aspect in how The Look of Silence holds a mirror up to the audience. The first shot is of a television set with elderly Indonesian men casually discussing how they murdered communists in the 1960’s. They boast and chuckle as they demonstrate the dark acts they carried out as though they were more factory workers than soldiers. Watching this footage is a young Indonesian man who stares at it without emotion. His face is as mute as his mouth the way he emits no expression when witnessing this footage. He wants to understand why these men got away with murder and what went through their minds. His silence is our silence in how these older folks speak from experience of inhuman acts.

The young man watching the footage is a traveling optometrist who had a brother that was killed during this genocide of the 1960’s. When he’s not playing joyfully with his children, he’s making house calls to small homes and villages to test the eyesight of the elderly. The optometrist clinically uses his medical device for testing the eyes of the aged to determine what glasses are best for them. After his work is done, he begins to calmly ask questions to these men about their history of working as a soldier. The old men playfully describe their experience of slaughtering others that they found dangerous to their beliefs. Many will often provide a pantomime description of how they would toss bodies or deliver beatings. The optometrist is silent with these answers just as he was with the footage. He continues to ask more questions with no change in tone. The more he asks, the more angry these men become. The questioning becomes uncomfortable as they can see the strings being pulled to paint them as villains. They start to become violently irritated to the point where they refuse to discuss the subject anymore.

The optometrist does not attempt to egg on or persist passionately with his questioning. He asks simple questions and leaves a long enough pause for the answer. The longer the pause, the more irritation. During the silence of the optometrist, the angered men attempt to see through his quiet as that of an agenda-driven person who intentionally wants to dig up ghosts of the past for political sensationalism. The optometrist doesn’t answer and only asks another question if the opportunity arises. These elderly soldiers can sense a level of spite not present - one that remains where there appears to be none. These men are killers and have not answered for their crimes. The silences eat away at their integrity and bring forth guilt the way they refuse to continue the interview.

Many of those interviewed, including their families, bitterly ask why all the prying. The optometrist has a good life at the moment. He makes a decent living and has wonderful children that he absolutely adores. His life is good; why must he dig up the past? The reason becomes clear as he presses on with patience and silence. These are men that have no remorse or haunting nightmares about what they’ve done. Their killings were justified in their minds and can’t think of it in any other way than jovial. It isn’t until this history is revealed to the daughters of one of these killers does the shock set in. Her father is frustrated by this reveal and promptly wants to end the interview, shutting his eyes and closing his ears, pretending that this is not an issue.

The Look of Silence was directed by Joshua Oppenheimer and intended as a companion piece to his equally important documentary The Act of Killing. It is absolutely essential viewing for the inhumanity that never seems to leave old eyes. The fact that the optometrist had to remain anonymous for this picture while these war criminals continue to live out their lives without worry or punishment is the most shocking aspect. And yet the optometrist remains silent and listening, as the Indonesian government swept these crimes under the rug.

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