Gruber's Journey Explained

Gruber's Journey
Director:Radu Gabrea
Producer:Radu Gabrea, László Kántor
Music:Petru Margineanu
Editing:Melania Oproiu
Country:Romania, Hungary
Runtime:100 minutes
Language:German, Romanian, Italian

Gruber's Journey or Călătoria lui Gruber is a 2008 Romanian drama film directed by Radu Gabrea. It is set in World War II during the Holocaust in Iași (Iași pogrom) and was shot on location in Bucharest. The film screened at the Third Annual Romanian Film Festival.

Plot

The film centers on an Italian writer named Curzio Malaparte, who was a member of the Italian Fascist Party.

Malaparte is assigned to cover the Russian front for the Italian news service, and travels with Colonel Freitag of the Wehrmacht and the deputy commander of the local Romanian garrison to Romania. He suffers from a serious allergy and is sent to consult world-class allergist, Dr. Josef Gruber in Iași, but Gruber is missing.

Suffering terribly from his allergy, Malaparte desperately seeks to find the doctor who has been captured. During his search for the doctor he encounters shocking situations in the Holocaust against the Jews in the city. He later writes a very critical account of the incident in his novel Kaputt.

Cast

Production

In September 2007, scenes were shot at the North railway station in Suceava.[1] The railway station was chosen by the filmmakers to appear in the film because its architecture was reminiscent of the period of the Second World War.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Al doilea război mondial, într-o gară din Suceava. September 13, 2007. Libertatea. Romanian. August 24, 2009.