Cinemorgue Wiki
Son of Saul (2015 film poster)

Son of Saul (2015)

a.k.a Saul fia

Director: László Nemes

Plot Synopsis[]

A Jewish-Hungarian concentration camp prisoner (Géza Röhrig) sets out to give a child he mistook for his son a proper burial.

Male Deaths[]

  • Unknown Actor [Boy]

Female Deaths[]

  • None

Trivia[]

  1. During the preparation, director László Nemes, cinematographer Mátyás Erdély and production designer László Rajk made a pledge to stick to certain rules, or a "dogma", which included:
    • The film cannot look beautiful.
    • The film cannot look appealing.
    • We cannot make a horror film.
    • Staying with Saul means not going beyond his own field of vision, hearing, or presence.
    • The camera is his companion, it stays with him throughout this hell.
  2. Shot in the now unusual Academy aspect ratio of 1.375:1 to achieve a portrait-like narrow field of vision and to be close to the aspect ratio used in the 40s.
  3. Director László Nemes cited Elem Klimov's Come and See (1985) as an inspiration for his film.
  4. The film took five months of sound design, where human voices in eight languages were recorded and attached to the original recording of the production. Sound designer Tamás Zányi described the sound in the film "as a sort of acoustic counterpoint to the intentionally narrowed imagery".
  5. The 107-minute film consists of 85 shots, none of which are longer than four minutes.
  6. The outside scenes were shot only with natural light.
  7. Dario Gabbai, one of the last 2 known survivors of the Sonderkommando, saw the film and praised it. He lives in Los Angeles, California since 1951.
  8. Out of a whim, director László Nemes invited his friend Géza Röhrig, a Hungarian poet living in Brooklyn, to audition for a supporting role in the film. Just as the filmmakers were about to cast another actor as Saul, however, they found Röhrig perfect for the lead role. Röhrig didn't act on camera since the 1980s and this is his feature film debut.
  9. The filmmakers insisted on getting the film premiere in competition at a major festival. After failing to get the Berlin competition, although they could have premiered it in a different section, they decided to skip the festival and go for Cannes instead - which resulted in large success.
  10. Shot entirely with a 40mm lens to achieve a portrait-like narrow field of vision.