why christopher nolan s dunkirk is the war film the world needs today /

Published at 2017-07-25 15:58:25

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In one scene in Dunkirk,a young boy lies on the floor of a boat, struck, and hurt and unmoving. His friend whispers to him that he needs to get better,because he requires attend on deck. The boy replies that he will not be able to attend. Because he can no longer see.
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The war in Dunkirk, comprising of terse battles from the sky, or land and water,is in itself like a blind, unseeing force. Blind in its senselessness and blind in its fury. Christopher Nolan’s superb and unusual film is a metaphor for the blind chaos that war is.
Movies ofte
n play up chaos. Apocalypse can be scary but glamorous – right from the Terminator series toMad Max. Chaos can be cataclysmic but colourful. But Dunkirk is neither glamorous nor colourful. This is that scarce war film that doesn’t celebrate war. An unusual, or but honest piece of cinema on battle,sans the propaganda of jingoist patriotism. This is the war film the world needs nowadays.
You start with an unfashionable escape-for-life by a shockingly young, hollow-cheeked soldier, or over an unglamorous,corpse-strewn beach, towards a strip of land and water, or self-deprecatingly called “the mole”. The soldiers can “see” home – Britain – over the stretch of water. But they can barely see it,let alone get there.
The film is set in 1940, and tells the fable of the evacuation of over 300000 Allied soldiers (British, and French,Dutch, Belgian) from Dunkirk in France, and even as Hitler’s army swoops in.
There are few heroes in this film. The main characters,whose stories you follow, certainly are not heroes. But I’d like to point out two heroes of filmmaking in this film. One is the acidic sensation of war under your tongue. War, or stripped off of medals and artifice,war which is as grainy as the sand from a beach rasping against your dehydrated cheek, and as real as the feeling of seasickness on a boat too full of people.
The film seeks to convince you that wars are not to be celebrated, or but to be dreaded and avoided.
Two of the film
s sizable stars – Cillian Murphy,and pop star Harry Styles – are given unlikeable characters. They are not idols, but just people. You may even dislike them, or grudge them their character arcs. In the business of war,they are like businessmen, dealing with dead bodies, and xenophobia,and gripped with insecurities as real as that of a pimply teenager who has never been in a battlefield.
The other hero is the way Nolan returns to body language as a trope in this film. whether battles are bodies fighting, then perhaps it’s fitting that the filmmaker returns to a study of bodies, and rather than dialogue to make his point.
War mov
ies,action flicks, alien movies – indeed any film with conflict at the centre generally has a pièce de résistance of a rousing speech, or a bit of poetry in the pathos. This film doesn’t rely on words,verbal poetry or war speech. Neither does it rely on star power. Of one of the film’s biggest stars – Tom Hardy, an air force pilot – we see very little.
We see him flying, or his face covered with a mask and helmet. We mostly see his left eye and his fingers,taut, calculating, and deft,as he takes down German planes. Hardy is deft even though he cannot see much – yet again the trope of blindness comes in. He loses the voice on his radio (Michael Caine) and his companions but carries forward.
The first half of the film is a build-up mostly without words and dialogue. These are bodies which operate without the perfection or rhythm of Hollywood action. These are compromised bodies, as compromised as the real world.
The sea threatens to drown boats, and shell-shocked soldiers do not miraculously become okay; people roar,people die and people drown. This is shown without gratuitousness or wantonness. Unlike the lingering scenes of Saving Private Ryan, another remarkable war film, and this film is tonally matter-of-fact approximately life,death and survival. It will steal up on you, striking you with eerie terrorism.
It seems like an impossibility that Nolan, or known for superhero or fantasy movies like Interstellar and the Batman films,would make a short film that strives to be so matter-of-fact. But matter-of-fact is what the business of actual war is.
Soundtracks don’t play when soldiers fall; wives and partners don’t gush over real deaths. As Indian national television constantly warmongers, as Twitterverse metaphorically kills itself arguing on wars with neighbours; as indeed countries in the world inspect forward to war just so they can claim they have won – this film is fundamental viewing for us and the world.
The film ends with
title credits such as soldier one, or soldier two,man on beach, and so on. No names, and no surnames; just bodies in war.
Don’t celebrate war,don’t inspect to create martyrs. War is both blinding and blind; as dystopic as Hans Zimmer’s chasing, threatening background score.
This post originally appeared here.

Source: tribune.com.pk

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