That’s not the only thing haunting this character; the movie is punctuated by flashbacks in which a young woman is initially menaced by German soldiers in a forest. Who this woman is, who she was to Malkin, and what finally happened to her are all revealed as the flashbacks progress.
But before catching up with Malkin in a new home in Israel later in the ‘50s, the movie cuts to Argentina, and a movie house that’s showing Douglas Sirk’s classic “Imitation of Life.” Haley Lu Richardson’s Sylvia watches, rapt, the searing scene in which Troy Donahue’s Frankie denounces Susan Kohner’s Sarah Jane, an African-American woman passing for white. Behind Sylvia a handsome boy named Klaus giggles. She shushes him, but thinks she’s cute. Later, when they’ve dated a bit themselves, Weitz will restage the “Imitation of Life” scene itself. This is pretty clever on a number of levels, since Klaus turns out to be an anti-Semite and neo-Nazi, as filled with race hatred as Frankie. And then there’s the fact that Susan Kohner is Weitz’s mother. (Who at 81 is still alive to appreciate the homage.)
Klaus’ dad is Eichmann, the architect of the Holocaust, who’s masquerading as an uncle. Sylvia’s father tips off a Mossad man (an action that will yield unpleasant consequences for father and daughter). In Israel, a plot is hatched, but not before a debate: assassinate Eichmann, or purloin him and bring him to Israel to stand trial. Malkin, still haunted by his botching of the depicted capture, is of two minds about it. But he’s eager to serve, and while his superiors consider him hot-headed and impetuous, he’s got the zeal and strategic stuff to get the project going.
As you’ve likely inferred from this plot description, “Operation Finale” partakes in a lot of commonplaces, from the trope of the Maverick Team Leader on down. It does so with a little wit. When asked why he never gets the plum assignments at his Mossad posts, Malkin drolly responds, “I don’t know. Antisemitism?” And Isaac really goes full Clooney in these early scenes, toggling between easy charm and melancholy soulfulness. Comic actor Nick Kroll plays his associate, and Melanie Laurent is an anesthesiologist (and ex-girlfriend of Malkin’s) who’s upset about her own previously botched case. As they get the band together, the movie takes on a heist-picture flavor: call it “Ben-Gurion’s 11.” (Simon Russell Beale has a gratifying cameo as the then-Prime Minister.)
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