Friday, July 28, 2017

NOW SHOWING: Dunkirk (2017)



                WARNING:  The following review was written by a war movie lover for war movie lovers.  General public, proceed at your own risk.

                War movies come along rarely these days.  Good war movies are even rarer.  Ever since hearing about the upcoming “Dunkirk”, directed by none other than Christopher Nolan, I had circled the date on my calendar and eagerly awaited it.  I became more eager as the trailers came out and the buzz ginned up.  I had every reason to expect it to be an amazing movie.  I waited to see it in an IMAX, as it was meant to be seen.  I do not remember when I was more disappointed by a war movie.  Perhaps “Gods and Generals”.

                The historical event simply known as Dunkirk seems ripe for screen treatment.  The bad guys win, but the good guys survive daunting odds in a miraculous evacuation aided by plucky civilians. Sacrifices abound.   Throw in historical controversy.  And it had something for every military nut – air battles, ground combat, and naval activities.  In 1958, the movie “Dunkirk” tried to tell the story by concentrating on a squad and two civilian boaters and including the bigger picture.  Chris Nolan decided it was high time to revisit the event.  But he decided to throw out the big picture ("Operation Dynamo" is not mentioned in the movie) and add the air leg of the tripod.  His movie would be more personal and immerse you in the experience.  It should have been a great companion to the original.  Somehow he misfired, as far as I am concerned.

                Being a modern director, Nolan could not just use a traditional narrative approach.  The movie is like a triptych consisting of a land, sea, and air component.  The three story arcs are interweaved in a nonlinear structure.  The movie drops us straight outside the Dunkirk perimeter with a vague title card that reminds historically literate viewers what the situation was in 1940 – Germany was kicking British and French butt.  Tommy (Fionn Whitehead) is in a group of “odds and sods” (a term for soldiers cut off from their units) that are making their way to the Dunkirk perimeter.  For those of you, like me, who think that Nolan has adopted the “lost patrol, who will survive?” structure from the 1958 movie, think again.   Tommy’s crew are not going to be whittled down slowly.  Tommy, who is one of the “heroes” of the movie, pals up with a supposed Brit named Gibson (Aneurin Barnard) and they try to cut the line to get on a ship leaving the mole.  The mole is a pier supervised by Commander Bolton (Kenneth Branagh) where ships pull up alongside and load up with soldiers.  Keep in mind, Tommy has just arrived and these other guys have been waiting hours (days?) in orderly fashion to be saved.  I have to admit my view of Tommy was colored by my view of every line cutter I have encountered.  From this point on, I did not really care if Tommy lived.  I did feel sorry to any shipmates of his, however.  Because every ship Tommy got on was doomed to be sunk.  This is not a “who will survive?” movie, it is a “what will survive?” movie.  Answer: one little boat.

                The second panel of the triptych is Mr. Gibson (Mark Rylance) in his yacht coming across the Channel to help pick up soldiers.  On the way, he rescues a shipwrecked soldier (Gillian Murphy) who is less than thrilled with the prospect of returning to Dunkirk.  He is on board to provide dramatic tension.  Have you ever been on an hours long yacht ride?  Have you watched one?  The voyage will be intertwined with the third story line - that of an RAF pilot named Farrier (Tom Hardy).  Farrier will provide the dogfight portion of the film.  The air combat is shown out of sequence so Nolan can earn his auteur merit badge.

                The effort put into “Dunkirk” is commendable.  Nolan, who made his fame in action films like “The Dark Knight”, decided to avoid directorial stereotyping.  He eschewed CGI in favor of “practical effects”.  Sixty authentic ships and boats were used, including twelve of the original “Little Ships”.  Three Spitfires were available and a Yak-25TW was rigged to look like a Spitfire.  The Yak is a two-seater that allowed for shots over Hardy’s shoulder and for an actual pilot to fly the plane.  The one Me-109 was portrayed by a Spanish HA-1112 Buchon.   The thousands of extras were supplemented by cardboard cut-outs of soldiers and vehicles.  Unfortunately, it is sometimes hard to tell the real actors from the cardboards.  The cast is eclectic.  It has some heavyweights like Branagh, Hardy, and Rylance, but the rest are future star wannabes.  The biggest buzz brewed up around pop heartthrob Harry Styles as one of Tommy’s sink-baits.  Nolan was not familiar with his fame when he was cast, that makes two of us.  Hardy spends the whole movie with his face covered.  In other words, it’s a Tom Hardy movie.  He doesn’t get to say much, which is better than mouthing platitudes like Branagh.  “I’d rather fight waves than dive bombers.”  That’s pretty much a speech for this movie.  The dialogue is sparse.  Nolan lets the scenarios do the talking.  The interweaving of the stories is intriguing and you definitely are encouraged to pay attention.  (Someone should do a study on the average amount of time it takes a viewer to realize the movie is nonlinear.)  I can imagine there are some baby boomers who will be a little confused by the plot.  Which plane is Farrier shooting down now?  The movie can be mesmerizing in its cinematography.  Nolan shot it in 70 mm and on an IMAX screen the details are amazing.  The air action is especially noteworthy (although the dogfights are not the best ever), but the movie also has some visceral sinking scenes.  Those of you who want to see Harry Styles drown will enjoy this film.

                So, what’s not to like?  Not much, if you are a regular movie fan.  Lots, if you are a war movie buff.  I am aware that Nolan was making a fictional tale.  He purposely did not have any real characters in the film.  But he also stated that he would take a documentary approach to the story.  He interviewed numerous veterans of Dunkirk.  (Most complimented the film, but commented that it was too noisy.  And kids should stay off their lawns.)  Their personal stories are reflected in the experiences of the characters in the movie.  For instance, at one point a soldier wades into the surf to fatalistically swim back to England.  I have no problem with a movie about a famous historical event that downplays tutoring in favor of entertainment.  But I do take umbrage when the  movie confuses the facts and blows the opportunity to use an historical setting to tell a rousing tale.  The best way to describe “Dunkirk” is to say that Nolan has set his tale in Dunkirk and seasoned it with some references to the actual event, but he cared little about bringing the battle to life.  His decision to leave the bigger picture out forfeited a lot of the suspense inherent in the event.  You wonder what will happen to Tommy and the others, but you do not feel for the army and the nation.  The movie is only 107 minutes long so it’s not like Nolan decided to leave Churchill and the brass on the cutting room floor because of time constraints.  A historical epic that is less than two hours?  Hell, “Dunkirk” (1958) is 134 minutes!  Speaking of which, you may be shocked to learn that the old movie is better than the new.  It was able to show the micro and the macro.  Binn (John Mills) made a much more interesting central character than Tommy.  And it has a much more interesting take on the civilian rescuers.  It has no RAF, but it does cover the other two branches better. As far as a history lesson, there is no comparison.  If you want to learn what happened at Dunkirk and you don’t care who Harry Styles is, the 1958 movie is the better bet.

                “Dunkirk” is a classic example of how low a bar historical movies have these days.  It is being commended for its accuracy and it is above average.  However, there are still moments that should make history buffs cringe.  (Especially if you have read two books about the event recently.)  The decision to forego special effects deprives the movie of the chaos and destruction that it needs to reflect the desperate nature of the trap the British were in.  Shots of Dunkirk (where the location shooting occurred) do not show the results of the relentless Luftwaffe bombing.  The use of the mole is sanitized and simplified.  Events there are supposed to take place over a seven day period, but they appear to be close to the end of the evacuation.  This causes some problems.  Barton mentions the seemingly unattainable goal of rescuing 30,000 men when in reality they would have been well past that figure.  He also laments the withdrawal of destroyers from the effort when at this point that decision had been reversed.  The French soldiers are evacuated after all the British were gone, when in actuality they were being jointly evacuated midway through.  At this stage, the evacuation during the daytime would have been suspended in favor of night only.  As far as the beach scenes, there should have been more men waiting on the beach.  And a lot more debris.  And there should have been more action by the little boats to pick them up and deliver them to off shore ships.  Through the Gibson character, the movie implies the little boats brought the men back to England with them.  Some did - on their last trip of the day.  The movie makes it seem that the little boats were sent in only at the end to finish the job.  The cavalry riding to the rescue.  They were actually involved much earlier.  Gibson would not have made only one trip.  And he would not have snuck away to avoid having his boat commandeered by the Royal Navy.  If a boat owner wanted to sail the boat himself, he could.   But the biggest flaws are in the showy dog fights.  The three-plane formation that Farrier is in is tactically sound, but they would not have approached the port at a low altitude.  If they were bounced by a German fighter, he would have had to have brass balls to tangle with the three of them.  Normally, I would not lament the lack of CGI, but in this case it could have been used effectively.   As far as Farrier shooting down a Stuka while gliding…  By the way, that was his fourth kill of the sortie!

                Some critics have gone as far as calling “Dunkirk” a great war movie.  One even called it the greatest.  Having seen a fair amount of war movies, I can tell you it is very overrated.  I do not even think it is in the top 100.  I’m not saying it is a bad movie, I’m saying it does not live up to the hype and is not even as good as the 1958 version.  It was a missed opportunity.


GRADE  =  C

23 comments:

  1. You make a lot of excellent points. Not knowing the event as well as you do I enjoyed the movie much more. Like you I was pretty offended by the characters trying to jump line. Made me think they were saying ALL Tommys were like this, when obviously that wasn't the case. I never did care whether or not the first soldier seen survived or not, but by the end of the movie I realized I was seeing the event "painted" with a broad brush in watercolors, if you will, and not an oil painting trying to capture each little detail. The gliding spitfire was silly, but when it was burning on the beach I felt something I'm still trying to figure out. It really go to me somehow. So, as a war movie I can't argue with your grade. But as a "movie", I'd give it an A-.

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    1. I have no problems with your opinion, as always. Thanks for sharing. I like the painting analogy.

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  2. Good review. I noticed a number of things in the film that didn't add up to me. The pilot at the end lands on the German section of the beach when he could have bailed out in the British section. Hope he enjoys the next 5 years in a Nazi prison camp. I mean it's not like they could have used an experienced pilot in the upcoming Battle of Britain or anything.
    The rescued soldier may have been too shell shocked to display much gratitude, but the hostility he displayed such as slapping the hot tea out of the boy's hand when he offered it was just not believable to me. And when they were in the beached boat full of bullet holes, the Brits decide the boat will float just fine if just one of them gets off the boat. I mean that would have made no difference at all. And Tommy spends several days hanging out with the soldier he met on the beach and never realizes he doesn't speak English. Come on.
    Like you I found the film a big disappointment and am scratching my head at the reviews calling it a masterpiece and the like.

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    1. I am perplexed as to why Nolan decided to have so many unheroic characters in the infantry. A couple would have been sufficient. I think the excuse for not bailing out would be the low altitude. He would have had to bail out earlier and then would not have been able to shoot down the Stuka and save the day! The whole scene in the beached boat was silly.

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    2. In a review out there somewhere on the net, a reference is made to a Spit found years after the war, buried on the beach. The reviewer thought the burning Spit was a homage to "that" pilot, whomever he was.

      And yes, it looked to me like he was at much too low an altitude to bail out.

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    3. Interesting. I read where if Farrier had attempted to land wheels down, the wheels would have dug into the sand with disastrous results. This expert argued he would have been better off leaving the wheels up. I don't know how close the Germans were from his landing site (seemed pretty close based on how soon they got to him), but I imagine German infantry would have been only too happy to be firing at that lame duck as it came in.

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  3. Love your blog, but I thought it was a great movie. 4/4 stars.

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    1. That's okay. I know I am out on a limb with this one.

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  4. Totally agree with you Keven, I would never recommend this movie to someone that wants to watch a WAR movie. Sad they never showed the soldiers defending everyone so they could get off the beach.

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    1. Thanks. I was beginning to wonder if I was nuts.

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  5. I didn't initially read your review before seeing the movie, but I did see that you gave the movie a C rating and I thought you were being too critical. Unfortunately after finally seeing 'Dunkirk' your review is so spot on. This movie had so much going for it, big budget, big name director, great photography. and to fail so spectacularly. I guess Nolan thought the story of Dunkirk was just too boring for today's audiences so he had to make it non-linear and confusing. Did that Spitfire fly around for 3 days?
    I can understand 'Interstellar' jumping around different time periods and seeing the same events from different perspectives, because the film was about space-time and going into other dimensions. But 'Dunkirk' was about WW2, just give us an entertaining movie.

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  6. Before we laud old Churchill with all this historical glory . Let me sober up a few these Churchill supporters.
    This movie(DARKEST HOUR)and (Dunkirk) fails to tell the truth about Churchill and his lying or his deliberate untruthfulness blaming the Belgian King and the Belgian army for the BEF's defeat in 1940. When in truth it was the Belgian King and the Belgian army that sacrificed themselves to allow the BEF to escape!
    Listen to Lord Keyes as he speaks to the BBC on THE GREAT LIE !
    link below
    https://youtu.be/Py-bZ3XMHcI
    How DARKEST HOUR or Dunkirk were made omitting this vital germain event in May 1940 reveals Churchills dirty work that know one wants to talk about.

    Churchill suprested the truth, these lies are now coming out as classified damning documents are now being made public.
    See Whose Fault Was Dunkirk?
    link below
    https://longreads.com/2017/08/07/whose-fault-was-dunkirk/

    It took over 40 years to get the old Churchill Society to come clean, because I finally had the evedence on them and they had no where to hide but admit Churchill had lied
    they used the words gross “terminological in exactitude” in describing Churchills actions.
    Copy and paste link below
    https://www.winstonchurchill.org/.../feeding-the.../

    In his book Dunkirk History behind the Motion Picture Joshua Levine used my research to clearly point out Churchill's Great Lie.
    link below
    https://www.amazon.com/Dunkirk-History.../dp/006274030X

    Perhaps now we can say, KIng Leopold III King of The Belgians,Commander and Chief of the Belgian Army May 10 1940 -May 28 1940 vindicated as
    "The Scapegoat who saved the British from defeat in 1940"

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  7. Have you seen WEEK END AT DUNKIRK 1964 (under the french title Week End A Zuydcoote). Epic movie starring Jean Paul Belmondo as a french soldier trapped on the beach with his buddies. It was one of the most expensive European films of its time, to rival The Longest Day and Is Paris Burning...

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  8. Dreadful movie! Having seen it for the first time on Blu-ray (which I am now kicking myself for buying), I really can't fathom why they bothered making it.

    There was no introduction of anything including the historical background of the movie. Either the audience was expected to have foreknowledge of the Dunkirk evacuation or the director didn't care.

    There was essentially zero character development. As a result, I personally didn't give two hoots about any of them.

    There was no real suspense generated or sense of deliverance in the end. For some reason, I found myself wanting to end the movie on several occasions, the first time less than half way through.

    Almost nothing of any real interest happens in the movie.

    The special effects are quite unspectacular.

    The aerial combat is quite lame and unsatisfying and apparently relied upon real, still airworthy Spitfires, Bf 109s and He 111s (or their stand-ins) and not so much on CGI. The air battles shown involve too few aircraft to be historically believable.

    Surprisingly, no depiction or even a mention of ground combat around the shrinking Dunkirk perimeter is shown and there is no sighting of any Germans.

    Unlike the "little ships", none of the larger naval vessels look period-appropriate (they all have a distinct post-war/modern appearance about them).

    As others have alluded to here, there is apparently something seriously wrong with the timing of the various story arcs (particularly those showing the goings on aboard the civilian yacht and
    the aerial dogfights) relative to the entirety of the Dunkirk evacuation which went on for a total of ~eight days.

    The sound and music annoyingly overwhelm the dialogue (what there is of it) in too many cases. Some sound effects (like incoming artillery) don't seem correct to me.

    Can anyone tell me the logic of that pilot going to all the trouble of making a risky powerless wheels-down landing of his Spitfire on the enemy-held beach and then torching it? Who writes this nonsense anyway?

    The sequence with the British soldiers getting shot at on the abandoned, beached vessel was so ridiculous I don't even want to talk about it. How about posting a lookout topside next time?

    As the British would say, this movie is absolute rubbish. In my opinion, it doesn't even start to tell the story adequately. "In Which We Serve" and "Mrs. Miniver" actually do much better jobs with the Dunkirk evacuation, and that event isn't even a primary plot element of those movies.

    I think you were far too generous awarding a C to this tripe as I would have given Dunkirk (2017) an unequivocal F.

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  9. yidio movies - This movie has no character development at all people are just dying and you don't feel anything heck i don't even remember the main characters name and i saw the movie yesterday. People are just overreacting over a Nolan movie i started sleeping in the end. showing different perspective of characters was unnecessary and i saw the same scene again and again and sometimes knew what was going to happen to the character
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  10. You know, I absolutely loved Dunkirk when I first saw it, and have always done, and found it better then the 58 film, and I think it does deserve to be called one of the best films ever made. And even though I don't agree with your opinion, you presented your case in such a calm, level-headed manner that even though I disagree so strongly with your thoughts on this film, I can't help but appreciate your open-minded look at this movie and many others and try to understand your criticisms. It's kind of amazing after reading this that you have an amazing blog on those films, and while not everyone, including myself, agree with your opions, you're really such a measured, rational guy.

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    1. Thanks for the kind words. I have a strong belief that everyone has the right to what they think is good. That's why I don't troll people's opinions on movies. I wanted so much to like "Dunkirk", but I just didn't. But I can see why others like it. I am not trying to convince people that movies they like are actually no good. My main goal is to point out whether war movies are realistic and accurate.

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  11. Interestingly, Will Attenborough, the grandson of Richard Attenborough, who appeared in the 58 Dunkirk, appeared in the 17 one as a sailor who orders Tommy and Gibson off the hospital ship.

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  12. I looked forward to seeing this movie when I first saw the promotions for it since good war movies very seldom come along now. So much potential for a phenomenal movie. Never been more disappointed! Terrible movie.

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Please fell free to comment. I would love to hear what you think and will respond.