The art of sound design in the Oscar-nominated film ‘The Zone of Interest’ (2024)

With the 96th annual Academy Awards being held on Sunday, there is excitement surrounding the film “The Zone of Interest,” with its remarkable soundscape evoking the worst of the Holocaust. Special correspondent Malcolm Brabant visited Oscar-nominated sound designer Johnnie Burn at his studio, as part of our arts and culture series, CANVAS.

Notice: Transcripts are machine and human generated and lightly edited for accuracy. They may contain errors.

  • Geoff Bennett:

    The Academy Awards are being held in Los Angeles Sunday.

    "Oppenheimer" is getting much of the buzz, but there's also excitement surrounding a film called "The Zone of Interest," with its remarkable soundscape evoking the worst of the Holocaust.

    Special correspondent Malcolm Brabant visited Oscar-nominated sound designer Johnnie Burn at his studio as part of our arts and culture series, Canvas.

  • Malcolm Brabant:

    At an art cinema in Southern England 5,500 miles from Hollywood, the audience is preparing to be assailed by the sonic genius of Johnnie Burn.

  • Johnnie Burn, Sound Designer:

    I can't say how you enjoy it, because it's — that might not be the right word, but I hope you appreciate it.

  • Actress (through interpreter):

    And that's the camp wall?

  • Malcolm Brabant:

    "Zone of Interest" chronicles the mundane existence of a Nazi family living next to Auschwitz, while more than a million people are being murdered just over the garden wall.

    For his depiction of the banality of evil, director Jonathan Glazer has earned multiple Oscar nominations.

  • Johnnie Burn:

    Jonathan Glazer is very clever. He draws upon the collective knowledge that we all have of that period of time in history to paint pictures in your head.

  • Malcolm Brabant:

    And while the genocide of Auschwitz is ever present, the audience never casts eyes on it.

  • Johnnie Burn:

    I think sound is an extraordinary phenomenon. For me, I believe that we react to it. Immediately, you hear something, your subconscious and your primal brain starts appending history and artifacts and nouns to that in a way that with visual images you process it with sound. You react to it.

  • Malcolm Brabant:

    This garden was a haven for the man in the white suit.

    Rudolf Hoss on the right was the commandant of Auschwitz. Hoss was captured after the war and executed in Auschwitz in 1947, not far from this backyard.

  • Actress (through interpreter):

    The heartfelt time we spent in the Hoss house will always be among our most beautiful holiday memories.

  • Johnnie Burn:

    They would walk people into the gas chamber, and they believed they were going for a shower, but, obviously, they were not. And that would create quite a noise.

  • Malcolm Brabant:

    Johnnie Burn worked his alchemy at home, to the alarm of his family.

  • Johnnie Burn:

    I have worked on many films in that back room, and some very loud grisly monsters and all sorts. And it's never a problem. But for this, I had to buy a soundproof door, because it really is the most violent film I have ever worked on. And yet you don't see any violence.

  • Malcolm Brabant:

    In your drive to be authentic, how important was it for you, at the same time, to respect the sanctity of Auschwitz, and also to honor the memory of the people who died there?

  • Johnnie Burn:

    I knew there was great responsibility not only to make the film work through sound, but to make sure that the sound we were using was historically accurate and as faithful as possible to the atrocities that happened there, without going to the point of sensationalizing.

  • Actress:

    The azaleas there. There are also vegetables.

  • Malcolm Brabant:

    In this scene, it's the wife of the commandant and her mother's come to visit.

  • Johnnie Burn:

    There's obviously all the sound that's in the garden, but the sound that's telling the other story is what you're hearing from the other side of the wall.

    What it actually is, is a collection of sounds that I have recorded over a period of a year, of finding things from research that represent what happened there.

  • Malcolm Brabant:

    Heavy industry, soldiers marching, the echo of the orchestra that played inside Auschwitz, and riots in Paris.

  • Johnnie Burn:

    I wanted to go out into the world and find where screaming actually exists. And given the context of what you're watching in the film, placing those sounds in the background very quietly is an awful lot more convincing than having a sort of actor recreate it.

  • Malcolm Brabant:

    Talk us through what's happening here.

  • Johnnie Burn:

    So, this is the boys in their bedroom at night. And the elder boy is on the top bunk looking at some teeth.

  • Malcolm Brabant:

    Gold teeth.

  • Johnnie Burn:

    Gold teeth.

  • Malcolm Brabant:

    Extracted from corpses in the gas chamber before they were incinerated.

  • Johnnie Burn:

    There's a particular sound here that the boy hears. It's a rhythm of his daily life.

  • Malcolm Brabant:

    The suggestion, that is the sound of the furnaces working overtime to eviscerate evidence of the Nazis' crimes.

  • Johnnie Burn:

    I made something here with my fireplace and some tubes to fan the flames in a microphone, and I layered that up to become a thicker, bigger sound.

  • Malcolm Brabant:

    Which provides the backdrop to one of the movie's most powerful scenes.

    It's the end of the day, and he's in his garden having a cigarette.

  • Johnnie Burn:

    This is the sound of what happened afterwards. This is, I think, just over the garden wall with the crematoria and the gas chambers.

  • Malcolm Brabant:

    Burn had to track down a vintage Nazi motorcycle to add one key detail.

  • Johnnie Burn:

    They used to run motorbikes at Auschwitz in order to preserve the sanity of the guards. Can you believe?

  • Malcolm Brabant:

    To drown out the screams.

  • Johnnie Burn:

    Absolutely, yes.

  • Malcolm Brabant:

    As awards season reaches its zenith, the accolades keep coming.

  • MAN:

    The BAFTA goes to "Zone of Interest," Johnnie Burn, Tarn Willers.

    (Applause)

  • Johnnie Burn:

    Good evening. Yes, it's funny to be standing here. My mother wouldn't have understood this. She always said to me, what do you mean you do the sound on films? They sound all right to me.

    (Laughter)

    (Applause)

  • Johnnie Burn:

    And I had to explain to her. I did.

  • Malcolm Brabant:

    Johnnie Burn and his sound team may have won Britain's highest film award, but the Oscars are a much tougher prospect. As always, there's a very strong field, but that it appears that "Zone of Interest"s main competitor is "Oppenheimer," the film about the father of the atomic bomb.

  • Johnnie Burn:

    I have had it said to me by many of my very illustrious peers that what you have made here is one of the most significant pieces of sound design in cinema ever, potentially. So, great. And that's Jonathan Glazer's, really, more than anything else.

  • Malcolm Brabant:

    Burn only has two days to wait to discover whether the academy feels the same way.

    For the "PBS NewsHour," I'm Malcolm Brabant in Brighton.

  • The art of sound design in the Oscar-nominated film ‘The Zone of Interest’ (2024)

    FAQs

    Is zone of interest nominated for sound? ›

    The best sound Academy Award was one of two for Glazer's acclaimed Holocaust drama “The Zone of Interest,” which also won best international feature.

    What is the use of sound in The Zone of Interest? ›

    SCREAMS ARE PART of the sonic backdrop of Jonathan Glazer's drama “The Zone of Interest,” with sound design by Johnnie Burn. Sound is the single most important element in this film, a way to harness the medium's ability to split audio from image and create profound disharmony.

    Who did the sound design for The Zone of Interest? ›

    At an art cinema in Southern England 5,500 miles from Hollywood, the audience is preparing to be assailed by the sonic genius of Johnnie Burn. Johnnie Burn, Sound Designer: I can't say how you enjoy it, because it's — that might not be the right word, but I hope you appreciate it.

    Is Zone of Interest nominated for an Oscar? ›

    "The Zone of Interest" is also up for best picture, which made it the favorite to win in the international category. The film was nominated for five Academy Awards, including best director, sound and adapted screenplay, which went to Cord Jefferson for "American Fiction."

    Why The Zone of Interest should win the best picture Oscar? ›

    But the Oscars, in theory, are supposed to reward an achievement of craft and on that front The Zone of Interest is impeccable. It deserves recognition for its rigorous, precise execution of style, its feat of immersion, and for its impressive gambit of perspective.

    Was The Sound of Music nominated for an Oscar? ›

    What is sound zone? ›

    Sound zones enable multiple simultaneous sound experiences in the same physical room without interference.

    What is the purpose of sound in film? ›

    Sound plays a crucial role in creating a captivating and immersive experience for film viewers. From the subtle background noises to the boom of an explosion, sound helps to establish the atmosphere, evoke emotions, and enhance the story being told.

    How disturbing is The Zone of Interest? ›

    It's a disturbing work, guided by a discomforting sense of immaculateness that chills the viewer. It is the sanitation the film performs, which speaks to the now, in a way few Holocaust films have done before. You could, of course, accuse Glazer's film of merely being a formal exercise.

    Was The Zone of Interest true? ›

    Is 'The Zone of Interest' based on a true story? Yes and no. Rudolf Höss was a real-life German SS officer who lived in a house right outside of Auschwitz with his wife Hedwig and their children, though the film is a dramatization of their lives.

    How many Oscar nominations did Zone of Interest get? ›

    'Zone Of Interest' Producer Says Film's Five Oscar Nominations For Jonathan Glazer Movie Are “A Real Education” - IMDb.

    What is the movie The Zone of Interest based on? ›

    Written and directed by Glazer, the movie is loosely based on the 2014 novel by Martin Amis with the same title. Heavily researched — Amis lists numerous resources in the emotional afterword — the book is narrated by three men, including a fictionalized character based on Rudolf Höss, the S.S.

    What Oscar season is The Zone of Interest? ›

    "The Zone of Interest" marks Jonathan Glazer's first Academy Award. The Holocaust drama is also a Best Picture nominee at the 2024 Oscars.

    Is zone of interest English speaking? ›

    Loosely based on English author Martin Amis' 2014 novel of the same name, The Zone of Interest is a German language World War II film generating lots of buzz this awards season.

    How many Oscars did Zone of Interest get? ›

    The Zone of Interest, the German-language Holocaust drama directed by Jonathan Glazer and starring Christian Friedel and Sandra Hüller, has won the United Kingdom its first-ever Academy Award for best international feature at the Oscars 2024.

    Was The Zone of Interest filmed at Auschwitz? ›

    The project was formally announced in 2019, with A24 confirmed to distribute the film. Filming took place primarily around Auschwitz in summer 2021.

    What was the sound Oscar for 2024? ›

    Best Sound: Tarn Willers and Johnnie Burn won for The Zone of Interest, over The Creator, Maestro, Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One, and Oppenheimer.

    Should I watch Zone of Interest? ›

    The Zone of Interest is a difficult film to watch. It's so much easier to watch a film about the Holocaust when the villains are larger than life and easy to hate. But in this film, the evil that is happening is hidden under a veneer of normalcy.

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