Occupied City review – a mantra-like meditation on Nazi-occupied Amsterdam

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Steve McQueen’s four-hour-plus documentary, with commentary of life in the Dutch city during the second world war set to images from the present, feels more like a gallery installation

Steve McQueen’s latest project – a marathon documentary about the Nazi occupation of Amsterdam that weaves together reflections on the past and the present – has an ambition and expansive scope to match the Small Axe films, but feels closer in approach to his early gallery installation work than it does to his narrative film-making.

It’s based on the exhaustively researched book Atlas of an Occupied City (Amsterdam 1940-1945), by the writer and film-maker Bianca Stigter, director of the excellent documentary Three Minutes: A Lengthening, and also McQueen’s wife. The film juxtaposes succinct narrated accounts of the wartime stories linked to particular addresses (predominantly but not exclusively focusing on the fate of Amsterdam’s Jewish residents), with contemporary footage of the same locations. There are moments of lyrical beauty, and what is never in question throughout the nearly four-and-a-half-hour running time is the love that McQueen feels for his adopted home city.

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