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The Plot Against America movie review (2020)

Roth’s novel imagines a world in which Charles Lindbergh ran for President against FDR in the early days of World War II, and he did so on a platform of no involvement in the growing war in Europe. It’s remarkably easy to imagine a candidate arguing that we shouldn’t send our boys to die in a foreign war, and that we should stay out of combat and not get involved in the persecution of Jews, especially if that candidate was himself an American hero. In fact, “The Plot Against America” makes this alternate history remarkably believable by paying so much attention to detail and atmosphere over melodrama.

It helps that we see the changing world through the forced perspective of one family in Newark, New Jersey. The six-episode mini-series starts in 1940, introducing us to the Levin family, led by the headstrong Herman (Morgan Spector) and compassionate Bess (Zoe Kazan). They have two children, older Sandy (Caleb Malis) and younger Phillip (Azhy Robertson), and much of the impact of “The Plot Against America” comes from seeing a changing, increasingly dangerous world through the eyes of children. Sandy is old enough to know who Lindbergh is and idolize him a bit, and so he becomes torn between his father’s belief that the President is a dangerous anti-Semite and wanting to trust in American leadership. It doesn’t help that his aunt Evelyn (Winona Ryder) gets closer to a local Jewish leader named Rabbi Lionel Bengelsdorf (John Turturro), who becomes a mouthpiece for the administration in trying to quell the fears of the Jewish population that what’s happening in Europe could come to the United States. Finally, there’s Alvin Levin (Anthony Boyle), Phillip’s cousin, who goes to Canada, who has joined the fight against the Nazis, only to come home injured and still be considered a criminal for doing so.

“The Plot Against America” takes a micro approach to a macro problem, and it does so brilliantly. Yes, the Levins have a closer connection to Lindbergh himself because of Evelyn and the Rabbi’s relationship, but there’s a palpable sense that there are families like this all over the country in this world—Jewish families who considered themselves Americans until America decided they didn’t care about Jewish people. There are incredibly subtle, complex issues at play here (which is no surprise from the writers of “The Wire,” of course), including the concept that not taking a bold stance against something like Antisemitism creates a tacit approval of it, emboldening racists and monsters by giving them air to breathe. The world becomes more dangerous not just because people commit awful, racist acts, but because people turn the other way when they do, allowing hate to grow.

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Larita Shotwell

Update: 2024-07-11