“War Game” is an animated war movie
based on the famous Christmas Truce of 1914.
It is a faithful rendition of the story told in the children’s novel by
Michael Foreman although some characters were added for the film. The book is very popular and the movie won
several awards, including the Children’s Choice Award at the British Animation Awards. The movie was a welcome addition to the WWI
movie fraternity.
The movie opens with some
British blokes playing one last football (soccer to Americans) match before enlisting for a much
bigger game. The soldiers are portrayed
as puppets. This movie is not exactly
subtle. Lord Kitchener literally comes
out of the poster to encourage impressionable young men to “play the
game”. Crowds cheer and peers pressure
and the main characters say “everyone else is going” to their parents. So they’re off to the trenches with mother’s
sobs ringing in their ears. The trenches
are nicely rendered, as is no man’s land.
Months pass and it is Christmas
time. On the eve, German’s can be heard
singing “Silent Night”. On the morn a
Brit comes out with a soccer ball and the fraternization kicks off, literally. It’s more of a kickabout than a game, but fun
is had by all. Naturally, when the
generals find out they are incensed with the thought that fun could coincide
with hatred for the enemy and commitment to the war effort. “There is to be no repeat of this unwarlike activity.” And there isn’t, as the final scene
emphasizes. The Tommies go over the top
following a soccer ball. With
predictable results.
Clocking in at less than thirty
minutes, “War Game” is a nice little movie and it does the service of introducing
kids to a semi-famous incident in the Great War. It is educational in that respect because it
accurately renders the legend of the Christmas Truce. I say “legend” because the incident (actually
several similar incidents) is debated by historians. The evidence for the fraternization comes
mainly from letters and memoirs so there could have been some
embellishment. Evidently it did begin
with Christmas caroling wafting across no man’s land on Christmas Eve. Then the next day, some brave Christian soul
dared to buck the trend and come out without belligerence. Others followed and gifts of food, tobacco,
and liquor were exchanged. Tentative
hand-shakes were followed by heartfelt hugs.
The soccer story is the cherry on top of the Christmas pudding. This act of comradeship is referred to in a
few primary sources and may have been more than one “game”. The most heralded version had the Scots
squaring off with the Germans. According
to one version, the Scots used the distraction of their kilts being blown by
the wind to expose their bare bums to win the match. Sadly, the movie does not depict this. Maybe in the future “unrated, adult” edition.
The animation is
interesting. However, that strength does
not overcome the main flaws of the movie.
Even for a movie aimed at children, the plot is trite and very
schmaltzy. I think our current
generation of kids who have been weaned on the Cartoon Network will not be impressed or
entertained. Plus the movie is pretty
depressing. The anti-war trope is better
aimed at an adult audience. Or young men
approaching military age. It is hardly
ground-breaking to suggest that the youth of Britain were naïve about war and
the powers that be were using them. The
movie deserves some credit for giving children an idea of trench life, but it
does not give a realistic account of the Christmas Truce. Hopefully it encourages research on the
subject.
GRADE = C
THE BOOK: War Game by Michael Foreman is a children’s book.
The art work is watercolorish, but effective. In the book, Freddie and his mates go to war
due to peer and crowd pressure. When
they arrive in France, they go through typical soldier jobs which do not
include combat until the end. In the process
of covering soldier life, Foreman throws in a lot of facts usually in the
form of captions to actual pictures. The
book includes not just the drawings, but also a lot of cool propaganda posters
and advertisements. In this respect the
book reads like a docudrama. This sets
it apart from most children’s books. It
also makes it a weird hybrid. The story
is aimed at children, but the facts are above their level. Without the trivia, the book would be
light-weight and frankly, boring. You
don’t really get to know the characters.
The plot is very simplistic, which is natural for a book aimed at
children. You get little of the misery
the soldiers went through until the big, depressing finish. As far as the soccer “match”, it is more of
an actual game than the kick-around of the movie.
GRADE = C
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