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Ben Kingsley as Adolf Eichmann in Operation Finale (2018). |
Ben Kingsley’s portrayal of Adolf Eichmann, the architect of the Nazis’
Final Solution, in
Operation Finale – which tells the tale
of his 1960 capture in Buenos Aires at the hands of Mossad and Shin Bet –
showcases the virtues of the British classical approach to acting. It’s a
marvel. His line readings have a shivering preciseness, but there’s an
exquisitely layered richness to them, too, like plucked strings that
release a multitude of embedded sounds, many of them surprising, some of
them mysterious. It’s like a concert by a musical genius who constantly
scrambles your expectations by shifting tempo and articulating passages in
ways no has thought of before. When, imprisoned in a safe house on the
outskirts of the city while his flight to Jerusalem to stand trial is
delayed, Eichmann asks Peter Malkin (
Oscar Isaac), the Shin Bet agent who
effected the kidnaping, for information on the well-being of his family,
you don’t know how to read what sounds like pleading in his tone, because
he’s such a master manipulator that he could be softening up the man he
refers to as “Herr Captor” – appealing to his humanity in order to get
concessions out of him. Even the inflection he gives to that phrase, “Herr
Captor,” is hard to interpret: its respectfulness, its acknowledgement of
who has the power, is complicated with slivers of wit and something that
sounds like it’s just on the edge of derisiveness.