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Auschwitz drama 'Zone of Interest' wins Oscar best international film

LONDON, United Kingdom — The powerful Auschwitz-set psychological horror film, "The Zone of Interest", which on Sunday won the Oscar for best international film, stunned critics with its penetrating study of the banality in the shadow of the death camp.

The victory marks the first time that a submission from Britain has won the Academy Award in this category, which is open to non-English language films made by countries other than the United States.

"Our film shows where dehumanisation leads at its worst. It's shaped all of our past and present," said British director Jonathan Glazer as he accepted the award, before issuing a strong statement about the conflict in Gaza.

"Right now, we stand here as men who refute their Jewishness and the Holocaust being hijacked by an occupation which has led to conflict for so many innocent people," said Glazer, who is Jewish.

"Whether the victims of October the 7th in Israel, or the ongoing attack on Gaza, all the victims of this dehumanisation, how do we resist?"

The German-language film, which earned a total of five Oscar nods and won three BAFTAs, focuses on the family of Rudolf Hoess, the longest-serving commandant of the Auschwitz camp, who lived a stone's throw from the gas chambers.

While the screams and gunshots are audible from their beautiful garden, Hoess (Christian Friedel), his wife Hedwig (Sandra Hueller, an Oscar nominee for "Anatomy of a Fall") and their children carry on as though nothing is amiss.

They pull the curtains to mask the rising smoke from the incinerators, they use their pool -- life carries on, even when the death trains arrive to disgorge their doomed passengers.

At one point, Hedwig samples a lipstick she found in the pocket of a fur coat stripped from a gassed woman. She rejoices when she finds a diamond in a confiscated tube of toothpaste.

The horror "is just bearing down on every pixel of every shot, in sound and how we interpret that sound... It affects everything but them," Glazer told AFP at last year's Cannes film festival where 'Zone' won the Grand Prix, the runner-up prize.

"Everything had to be very carefully calibrated to feel that it was always there -- this ever-present, monstrous

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