LOS ANGELES — In “The Survivor,” filmmaker Barry Levinson reaches back 80 years to tell the grueling story of a boxer who put the lives of fellow concentration camp prisoners at risk to save his own.
The moral and psychological repercussions for Harry Haft are why Levinson, the Oscar-winning director of “Rain Man,” was drawn to the project based on a book about Haft’s Holocaust ordeal written by his son, Alan Scott Haft.
“This is not about the life of somebody in a camp. It’s the fragments of what happened in the camp, and what happened there to survive,” Levinson said. “Now he’s trying to get on with life and struggling with it.”
Haft must face the questions of “how do you have a life, how do you have a full life?” he said.