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Film

Review: Denial

A movie that meticulously sticks to the facts.

January 26, 2017 14:07
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ByStephen Applebaum, Stephen Applebaum

2 min read

There's a scene in Denial where Jewish community leaders try to dissuade Deborah Lipstadt, powerfully played by Rachel Weisz, from fighting a libel suit brought by the Holocaust denier David Irving (Timothy Spall). The professor is an American, they have to live with Irving in Britain, and it will only give the has-been a new lease of life, they argue. 

Lipstadt, rightly, refuses to settle.

Even so, the concerns about giving him a platform came to my mind several times during the past couple of weeks, as an interview with Irving appeared in a national newspaper, radio and TV shows discussed him, and the news reported his views on Trump and Corbyn. Meanwhile, on social media, his supporters declared Denial a Zionist smear.

In fact, Denial is a movie that sticks soberly and meticulously to the facts. Indeed, director Mick Jackson and screenwriter David Hare take the theme of objective truth vs lies extremely seriously, and seemingly make adherence to them a point of principle. Every word uttered in the film’s compelling trial scenes, for example, was lifted verbatim from court transcripts, without any attempt to Hollywood-ise events by giving Lipstadt a grandstanding speech she never made.