Inheritance

Inheritance

2006 ""
Inheritance
Inheritance

Inheritance

7.5 | 1h15m | en | Documentary

Until she was thirteen years old, Monika Hertwig thought her father died fighting for his country in World War II. Then a chance comment led Monika to the horrific truth: her father was the brutal Plaszow concentration camp commandant Amon Goeth, and he was executed for his crimes.

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7.5 | 1h15m | en | Documentary | More Info
Released: June. 25,2006 | Released Producted By: , Country: Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

Until she was thirteen years old, Monika Hertwig thought her father died fighting for his country in World War II. Then a chance comment led Monika to the horrific truth: her father was the brutal Plaszow concentration camp commandant Amon Goeth, and he was executed for his crimes.

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James Moll

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Reviews

SheepdogDG In the company of "Capturing the Friedman's," this is a film that could never be repeated. And let's hope there are no more opportunities to do so in the future.My heart was pounding the entire time I watched this film. I felt for both women, and I awaited passions to boil over with the breath hanging in my throat. Surely, these are two women seeking some sense of resolution or closure, but are they seeking it from one another?If you haven't already viewed this film, I recommend "Schindler's List" and "Hitler's Children" as prerequisites. They will help frame the content that you will be witnessing in this film.
Martin Teller An odd coincidence that I watched this after I Am Twenty, another film about people whose fathers were lost in WWII. But Monika Hertwig had a very distinctive father: Amon Goeth, the vicious Nazi concentration camp commandant immortalized in Schindler's List. Monika struggles to cope with the atrocities committed by Goeth, and reaches out to Helen Jonas... a survivor who, as a young girl, was taken into the Goeth villa as a household servant and suffered abuse directly from Goeth's hand. The meeting between these two women provides moments far more shattering and resonant than anything in Spielberg's film, especially when they return to the villa. A very moving story of women trying to find peace with their histories, even better than Moll's previous Holocaust documentary, The Last Days.
Danusha_Goska Save Send Delete Monika Hertwig is the reason to see "Inheritance." She comes across as a very real, lovely woman, someone you'd like to have as a friend or next door neighbor. She's a grandmother and housewife, in her sixties, very tall and slim. She's sensitive and caring. She's also the daughter of Amon Goeth, the commandant of Plaszow, the Nazi concentration camp depicted in "Schindler's List." In that film, Ralph Fiennes played Monika's father. Monika was born in 1945. Goeth was executed in 1946.Monika reports how she learned, slowly but surely, as a child, who her father was and what he did. Monika contacted Helen Jonas, who, as a child, had been one of two Jewish woman named Helen who had served as Goeth's slaves in his Plaszow home. Jonas lived in New Jersey. Monika and Helen met at the site of the Plaszow concentration camp, and James Moll filmed their meeting.As several viewers have noted, Monika comes across as the more sympathetic of the two women. Monika allows her emotions to show. She weeps profusely when meeting Helen and appears to be approaching Helen for a hug. Helen rebuffs her. It is clear that Helen was severely hurt by her childhood experiences, and has never fully recovered. She still views the world as hostile, even when it is not. Monika is not an enemy. It is her profound misfortune to be the biological child of a very evil man, but she herself is not evil. One would have liked to have seen Helen express the forgiveness for which Monika so obviously hungers.Monika never knew her father, and comes to know him from others' accounts, including Spielberg's and Fiennes' depiction of Goeth in "Schindler's List." Helen fleshes out the depiction. Goeth pushed Helen, a mere child, down the stairs in his home several times. He knew that Helen, his little slave, had a boyfriend, Adam. One day Goeth teasingly asked Helen where Adam was, and, then, within minutes, shot Adam. Goeth kept two large dogs at Plaszow. He trained them to maul and kill human victims. He robbed Jews before killing them. Monika has a cigarette case from her father. She suspected that he stole it from one of his Jewish victims.Most mysterious is Monika's mother, Ruth Kalder. No one in the documentary mentions it, but, weirdly, Ruth looks Jewish; certainly her features are those that Nazis would identify as Jewish. She had abundant, striking black hair and a prominent nose, which Monika inherited. In one photo, Ruth looks very much like Chico Marx. This is not a wisecrack, but a statement of fact. It's more than a little odd that Goeth would select a girl who looked so Jewish, even as he sent thousands of Jews to their deaths for their allegedly obvious "racial inferiority," a racial inferiority that was supposed to be obvious in their dark Semitic features, allegedly so different from blond Aryan superiority. One has to ask, why did Ruth love Goeth? The documentary does not probe this pressing question."Inheritance" includes archival film footage of the actual execution, by hanging, of Amon Goeth. It was a grotesque event. Hangmen need to know their physics. Length of rope and drop must be calculated to produce a clean death. The masked executioners in Poland tried to kill Goeth two times before getting it right on the third try. The viewer may question why it is important to view this spectacle of death.I would like to have seen some harder questions asked of each character. Monika: Point blank, did you inherit any of your father's evil? Where did that evil come from? Where did it go? Is he in hell? Can God ever forgive men like Amon Goeth? What would you do if you were God? Would you send your father to hell forever? If not, why not? Helen: Will you ever be able to forgive? Will you ever be able to move on? Will you always be stuck in victim mode? Why are you so harsh with Monika? What about Helen's children? I would have liked to have heard more about their experience of being children of survivors. I would have liked to have seen some depth given to Poland. The bulk of this film was shot in Poland. There were Germans and Jews but there were Polish victims and heroes and perpetrators as well. Poland isn't even background in this doc and that is a failing. Two suicides and one drug addiction are mentioned, but not explored. In short, I was very moved by this documentary, but I would like to have seen it go deeper into the very big questions it touches on.
Mike B I have always been interested in the lives of perpetrators. There are numerous accounts of victims – whether they be victims of violent crime or wholesale genocide like the Holocaust.It is insightful (I suppose) to get a perspective of the darkness that motivated these individual perpetrators. Why did these people do what they did? There are a number of books on the subject; Gita Sereny and Daniel Goldhagen are authors that come to mind. There are few documentaries. This documentary is not about a perpetrator per se but of the daughter of one – in this case Amon Goth, who achieved visible notoriety in 'Schindler's List' by Steven Spielberg.Let me also state outright that the children of perpetrators should never be blamed or held responsible for the evil of their parents.The daughter – Monika – is consumed by considerable remorse by the evil deeds of her father. Monika never physically knew her father; she was born in 1945 and her father was incarcerated after the war and executed in 1946.Monika contacts one of the victims of her father - Helen Jonas-Rosenzweig – and they both agree to meet in Poland at the scene where Amon Goth was commandant of the Plaszow concentration camp and responsible for the liquidation (murder) of the Jewish community in Krakow.The meeting between these two very different women in Poland forms the focal point for this intensely human and rewarding documentary. Even though both women obviously have different backgrounds, each is a victim of the same person. Both have suffered for their entire lives because of Amon Goth (and Nazism). One would like to think that right is on the side of Helen (because she is a victim) but it is never that simple. For Monika this will not be the case – it would seem that she is almost alone with her extreme sadness of being the child of such a father. There are unforgettable scenes in this documentary – like during the initial meeting between Helen and Monika at the concentration camp where Monika breaks down, or in the villa of Amon Goth where Monika consoles Helen when she is looking out a window that brings back painful memories.One also comes to admire the courage of these two women who agreed to meet after years of painful anguish. One hopes that they each found some solace from the experience because they are both warm and decent people.