The Hitler Youth get a satirical stake through the heart in the wonderfully wacky Jojo Rabbit. Taika Waititi – he of Thor: Ragnarok – wrote the screenplay, directs the movie and even stars as a wacky Hitler, well a Hitler as the imaginary friend to a little boy stuck in the Hitler Youth during the brutal end-days of WWII.
Now that’s a high concept we can all get behind! Not since Hogan’s Heroes has Nazi insanity been so deftly skewered, only Jojo Rabbit is much funnier, interspersed with being profoundly sad. Such juxtapositions are less jarring than grounding, allowing us to reconnect with our humanity through both laughs and tears.
Indeed, the use of Hitler as a comic relief character proves inspired, especially as played by Waititi. Der Fuhrer’s self-serving nature comes through, as does his sociopathic insanity. And you can laugh at him!
Jojo Rabbit is a singular cinematic accomplishment for triple-threat Taika Waititi. It cements the brilliant funnyman from New Zealand’s position as one of the very best and funniest moviemakers working today.
Taika Waititi cooked up Jojo Rabbit in 2012, he tells Jimmy Kimmel in the nearby video, but finally got studio backing only after the monumental success of Thor: Ragnarok. The guy is solid gold.
Kveller claims him as an MOT, with a recent headline that reads Taika Waititi – a Polynesian Jew will play Hitler in his new satirical.
Maximum circo-surrealism gives the movie an old-school surrealism, given the nearly normal physio and bio realities.
Most notable about the reality depicted in Jojo Rabbit is Nazi insanity, using the canvas of Der Hitler-Jugend. “Jugend” looks almost like “Juden”, German for Jews. Anyway, the Hitler Youth have been a punchline for generations of post-war wits, most notably in Animal House. Jojo Rabbit shows us why.