Just the Wind Represents Hungary at Academy Awards
Between 2008 and 2009 six Roma families in Hungary were violently attacked
when murder squads set fire to their houses before gunning down the
occupants as they tried to escape.
In one attack on February 23 2009, the house of a Roma family in
Tatarszentgyörgy was set on fire by Molotov cocktails. The attackers shot
and killed two family members, a father (27) and son (5), as they fled the
burning home attempting to escape into the woods. Two other children
suffered serious burns. The on-duty police officer and a forensic expert at
the crime scene both failed to recognize the victims’ gunshot wounds. The
police classified the attack and murders as the result of a domestic fire.
An internal inquiry was later launched. The National Bureau of Investigation
noted clear similarities between this attack and several cases since summer
2008, which also involved Molotov cocktails, shotguns, and targeted houses
on the outskirts of the settlement.
Just the Wind (or in Hungarian Csak a szél) is a 2012 Hungarian film
directed by Benedek Fliegauf inspired by these events. The plot is fiction
and focuses on a Roma family living close by. The film competed in the 62nd
Berlin International Film Festival, where it won the Jury Grand Prix. Just
the Wind has now been selected as the Hungarian entry for the Best Foreign
Language Oscar at the 85th Academy Awards.
In Just the Wind, news spreads quickly of the murders. The plot follows the
reaction of a neighboring Roma family as they respond to the decision to
leave Hungary as soon as possible. Fliegauf’s hard hitting drama recreates
the atmosphere of fear and suffocating paranoia that pervades in the
aftermath of the attack.
Though the plot in Just the Wind is fiction, the story of fear and
desperation it depicts, and the violence it documents, is all too true.
This year a record 71 countries will compete in the 85th Annual Academy
Awards' foreign-language category.
"Through Just the Wind we wanted to pay tribute to all victims of racially
motivated violence” commented Monika Mecs, producer of Just the Wind.
“Unfortunately these kind of racist murders can and do happen all over, not
only in our country. This film opens a door onto the human pain and
suffering behind these crimes that we can hardly imagine. We as filmmakers
can play some small part in bringing the human reality of these terrible
events to a bigger audience through Just the Wind.”
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