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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/29/2017 5:50:21 PM   
Skyros


Posts: 1570
Joined: 9/29/2000
From: Columbia SC
Status: offline
Warspite thanks for the great response, i was afraid no one would. I think I hold the record for last response in a thread.

I have not seen it yet, my daughter's saw the movie and are excited to take me to it. I like your movie list and it is very close to my view.

Did you read the review from the War is Boring site? he did not like the movie at all.


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

Dunkirk Spoiler Alert

quote:

ORIGINAL: Skyros

https://queenofthinair.wordpress.com/2017/07/25/dunkirk-not-a-war-movie/amp/

warspite1

Is there a doctor in the house?

quote:

This is not a war movie at all.


Er…. permit me, if you will, the opportunity of explaining: YES. IT. IS. Are we clear?

quote:

Yes, I know that Dunkirk was part of World War II. Yes, I know there are soldiers, sailors and airmen and things exploding. Yes, there is some combat in the film which results in death and harm. That said, this is not a conventional war movie


Okay, don’t understand your point, but at least you have added a word that now makes your article perhaps worth reading on – even if that addition serves only to make a nonsense of your first point…. let's hope you don't repeat this first point later...

quote:

That said, this is not a conventional war movie, at least not as Americans would expect, because it is not really about war as Americans see war.

Are Americans a different species then? Why are you talking about ‘Americans’ like they are one homogenous mass? As this and other threads on this topic alone have proved, ‘Americans’ don’t have a view. Individual Americans do – and as far as this film is concerned - that view is mixed – just as it is for every other national grouping. People are people. Quelle surprise.....

quote:

This film does a great job of conveying the experience of the historical event which takes place after a major defeat, and is the prelude to the next phase of the war.


When you say the historical event, do you mean the war (even though this is not a war film….)? And why? Why do you separate Dunkirk from the Battle of France? Okay, you can if you want – although the evacuation from Dunkirk can be seen as part and parcel of the debacle that was Case Yellow – it was the closing stages, the finale of the German attack. The ejection of over 300,000 men from the continent, the death and surrender of thousands more, was PART of the major defeat - it didn't FOLLOW a major defeat.

It makes more sense for Case Red to be treated separately if one must for that can truly be seen to be a new phase of the battle for France.

quote:

So Dunkirk is an intermission of sorts.


Say whut? I thought you just said a battle on this scale was an intermission.

quote:

And an intermission is a time for pause, for reflection and for preparing for the next act.


Oh **** you did. Perhaps you can confirm which part of ‘pause and time for reflection’ marries up with the fact that RN and French sailors had nine destroyers sunk from under them – along with some 200 other vessels, over 150 RAF aircraft alone – not to mention the losses – the dead and captured British and French troops. The troops, the sailors, the airmen were racing against time to get as many troops off the beaches before the Germans completed their rout of the Allied armies. Destroyers and the larger civilian vessels went down with a handful of survivors - and you think this was an intermission......wow. What's the definition of intermission where you hail from?

quote:

And that is precisely what this film is: an existential reflection on survival, defeat and moral and existential meaning amidst all that.

No – it’s a war film – it’s a bloody war film!!

quote:

It is a reflection upon the pain of war when it does not go well, when there is no decisive winning battle, when there seems no place for individual heroism, when courage seems to be about enduring and surviving.


The effect on an individual following the viewing of Dunkirk may well be to reflect on what happened and why - but that is no different to coming out of the cinema after seeing Saving Private Ryan; it made one reflect. That is the essence of a good film – but you are making too much of this? When I bought my ticket it was because I wanted to see a war film. When I sat in the cinema, I sat enjoying a war film. I was not contemplating my naval, weighed down with existential whatever… I was watching a war film - and thought about it afterwards like I would any decent, thought-provoking film.

quote:

So what do I mean: This is not a war movie?


I don’t know, and frankly, I am afraid to ask……

quote:

This film is about the scale and horizon of the event,


I thought it was about Dunkirk….

quote:

…with little (except intermittently) focus on characters or the enemy. We do not have a chance to really get emotionally involved with any one character,

Well as it spares us from bizarre love triangles and lines like “Will this war ever catch up with us” that’s a good thing right?

quote:

I don’t actually think the Germans are The Enemy. If this is a film about survival and endurance, then the true enemy at Dunkirk is Time…..

Well, actually I think you’ll find that those bombs from the Stukas and Heinkels, the torpedoes, the rounds from the Messerschmitts, the artillery shells, the machine gun and the rifle fire does not emanate from old father time. It emanates from the German war machine. You see, the enemy were the Germans. Their shrinking of the Allied pocket around Dunkirk meant that time was of the essence – but old father time, the tooth fairy, the man in the moon? No. None of these were the enemy - it was the Germans.

quote:

When I think of a war movie, I think of Saving Private Ryan, Platoon, Patton, Enemy at the Gates, The Longest Day.


… and Dunkirk…..

quote:

The classical formula is that it is largely army especially infantry centric (though not always) with the focus on a small group of characters (the band of brothers) that we get to know and follow through the film.


Okay that is a ‘classic’ formula but it doesn’t make Dunkirk not a war film. And if you think the ‘classic’ formula always makes for a good war film well I defy you to find anyone (with a brain) that was pleased to get to know Rafe and his sidekick (whatever his name was) or anyone who actually followed the chuckle brothers on their ridiculous journey during which they saved Britain, blew off the Japanese and then bombed the crap out of Tokyo – all the while porking some nurse and getting Mr Pres so riled up he gets out of his wheelchair....

quote:

There is often gritty, intense combat portrayed showing the harm and carnage of war (blood and other war porn elements) and we are invited to identify with the heroes/protagonists and feel enmity towards the enemy who are portrayed as evil, wrong, mean, cruel and all things to be despised.


But this is relatively new. War films – even films that you would consider a war film but were made in a different age, didn’t centre on blood and guts. They were often more subtle. Back to Dunkirk, how many people don’t know the hideousness of the Nazi regime? I identified with the protagonists during Dunkirk. When Tom Hardy and his Scottish flying partner were flying around in the Spitfire I did not feel that I was missing out because I hadn’t previously seen them in some embarrassingly god-awful scene with a tasty nurse…..

Furthermore, this lack of getting to know the characters didn’t matter a jot to my elder warspite who was heartbroken by the fate of both George and the Frenchman.

quote:

Good versus evil with a decisive battle or event as part of a clear narrative arch that results in redemption, victory and resolution.


Who – please….. WHO watching Dunkirk did not know the backstory? That this was good vs evil? A decisive battle?? What do you actually think was happening? Why were all these ships being sunk and troops being bombed? Throughout the film it was made clear. “We need our army back”. Comment was made that “we are saving our aircraft and ships for the battle to come” and “victory is survival”. I mean how much clearer can it be made? The troops themselves thought they would be vilified upon their return - but when the public, expecting nothing but the worst, suddenly find that their army has returned thanks to a heroic effort (and thus there will be no surrender) - the relief far outweighs any anger or disappointment about the battle.

quote:

This film has none of that. Oh there is combat, but there is little blood – although still a great deal of grit, messiness and destruction.


Yes, it’s a war film. There is probably as much blood as in Dam Busters or Battle of Britain or the Green Berets.

quote:

There are a few moments of heroism, but they come mostly at the hands of civilians rescuing soldier, which of course upends the traditional war movie trope of civilians as victims.


Right that’s because it happened. Why does that not make this a war film? How many war films have civilians helping escaping POW’s (Great Escape) or helping commandoes in their bid to assassinate high ranking Nazi’s (Operation Daybreak) or just generally helping (A Bridge Too Far). Schindler’s List is a war movie. Lots of civilians in that one – including Oscar himself.

quote:

This is not a war movie.


Really? Did you just repeat that again after all I’ve told you?

quote:

…..it highlights this really interesting question about what a war movie is and what it is supposed to do. I wonder if we need to think more deeply about what a war movie ought to be and what it ought to do?


Er…. entertain, tell a story….. er…. where are we going with this?

quote:

Should it follow the standard hero/action film formula with a clear and unambiguous moral message and arc? What level of blood and carnage (and of what kind – individual versus collective) should be present and seen? And what do these expectations say about how we want to think about war? How do these expectations then shape how we think about and experience (for those who fight) actual wars?


Why does there need to be some kind of standard? There never has been before. Tastes, ideas, story-telling, realism – these are all elements that come and go like fashions. Why are some people getting on one over Dunkirk?

quote:

This film is a search for meaning when the standard meanings and narrative frames have utterly failed.


I think you are over-thinking this one. What meaning and narrative frames (whatever they are) have failed? Look how complicated is it? Britain and France are on their way to defeat. The cream of the French and practically the entire British armies are surrounded. Those in the know realised the French were finished. The British likely would be unless they get their army home. It’s a race against time because the Germans are closing the vice. Right what the hell are you searching for here?

quote:

How do we find meaning when we are one speck on a beach just trying to get out alive……. and there seems little that any individual can do to change the course of events?


Ask the poor sods at Omaha? Where's the difference? Apart from the fact that one is trying to get off the beach inland and the other off the beach onto a boat/ship.

quote:

Even Branagh as a high ranking naval officer seems bound and stuck, just as much as the grunt.


It’s called war – and its sheer bloody hell. The fact one has egg on their hats does not give them all the answers when all is turning to crap. Although Branagh’s real life character (probably William Tennant) was instrumental in identifying the importance of the Mole.

quote:

The reading (by one of the returning soldiers) at the end of the film of Churchill’s famous speech feels mocking and stirring at the same time.


Mocking? Why? What was mocking about it? Stirring yes, but I must have missed the mocking as I was too busy removing a massive lump from my throat and wiping a tear or two from the old visage.

quote:

The soldier who reads the speech has just escaped with his life and returned home to acclaim, dirty, perhaps traumatized and exhausted. Normally that is the victorious end. But here it is only the beginning.


We are back to where we were at the start. Allow me to explain: NO. IT ISN’T. Was it the end once Midway was won? Did they all pack up and go home after surrounding the Germans at Stalingrad? Did the Germans surrender after Battle of Britain – or was that just another beginning? Were no more RN ships sunk after the (Sink the) Bismarck? Just how many war films actually show the victorious end? From that point of view Dunkirk is no different to 99% of war films - so why all this psycho-babble about existential thingumabobs?


I haven't bothered to comment on the other post on that website as, unlike this one, its essentially just a negative review. No problem, that his opinion (although wrong imo) - but unlike this article at least he's not trying to be oh so clever, spouting nonsense about the answer to life, the universe and everything



(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 211
RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/29/2017 6:24:01 PM   
warspite1


Posts: 41353
Joined: 2/2/2008
From: England
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Skyros

Warspite thanks for the great response, i was afraid no one would. I think I hold the record for last response in a thread.

I have not seen it yet, my daughter's saw the movie and are excited to take me to it. I like your movie list and it is very close to my view.

Did you read the review from the War is Boring site? he did not like the movie at all.


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

Dunkirk Spoiler Alert

quote:

ORIGINAL: Skyros

https://queenofthinair.wordpress.com/2017/07/25/dunkirk-not-a-war-movie/amp/

warspite1

Is there a doctor in the house?

quote:

This is not a war movie at all.


Er…. permit me, if you will, the opportunity of explaining: YES. IT. IS. Are we clear?

quote:

Yes, I know that Dunkirk was part of World War II. Yes, I know there are soldiers, sailors and airmen and things exploding. Yes, there is some combat in the film which results in death and harm. That said, this is not a conventional war movie


Okay, don’t understand your point, but at least you have added a word that now makes your article perhaps worth reading on – even if that addition serves only to make a nonsense of your first point…. let's hope you don't repeat this first point later...

quote:

That said, this is not a conventional war movie, at least not as Americans would expect, because it is not really about war as Americans see war.

Are Americans a different species then? Why are you talking about ‘Americans’ like they are one homogenous mass? As this and other threads on this topic alone have proved, ‘Americans’ don’t have a view. Individual Americans do – and as far as this film is concerned - that view is mixed – just as it is for every other national grouping. People are people. Quelle surprise.....

quote:

This film does a great job of conveying the experience of the historical event which takes place after a major defeat, and is the prelude to the next phase of the war.


When you say the historical event, do you mean the war (even though this is not a war film….)? And why? Why do you separate Dunkirk from the Battle of France? Okay, you can if you want – although the evacuation from Dunkirk can be seen as part and parcel of the debacle that was Case Yellow – it was the closing stages, the finale of the German attack. The ejection of over 300,000 men from the continent, the death and surrender of thousands more, was PART of the major defeat - it didn't FOLLOW a major defeat.

It makes more sense for Case Red to be treated separately if one must for that can truly be seen to be a new phase of the battle for France.

quote:

So Dunkirk is an intermission of sorts.


Say whut? I thought you just said a battle on this scale was an intermission.

quote:

And an intermission is a time for pause, for reflection and for preparing for the next act.


Oh **** you did. Perhaps you can confirm which part of ‘pause and time for reflection’ marries up with the fact that RN and French sailors had nine destroyers sunk from under them – along with some 200 other vessels, over 150 RAF aircraft alone – not to mention the losses – the dead and captured British and French troops. The troops, the sailors, the airmen were racing against time to get as many troops off the beaches before the Germans completed their rout of the Allied armies. Destroyers and the larger civilian vessels went down with a handful of survivors - and you think this was an intermission......wow. What's the definition of intermission where you hail from?

quote:

And that is precisely what this film is: an existential reflection on survival, defeat and moral and existential meaning amidst all that.

No – it’s a war film – it’s a bloody war film!!

quote:

It is a reflection upon the pain of war when it does not go well, when there is no decisive winning battle, when there seems no place for individual heroism, when courage seems to be about enduring and surviving.


The effect on an individual following the viewing of Dunkirk may well be to reflect on what happened and why - but that is no different to coming out of the cinema after seeing Saving Private Ryan; it made one reflect. That is the essence of a good film – but you are making too much of this? When I bought my ticket it was because I wanted to see a war film. When I sat in the cinema, I sat enjoying a war film. I was not contemplating my naval, weighed down with existential whatever… I was watching a war film - and thought about it afterwards like I would any decent, thought-provoking film.

quote:

So what do I mean: This is not a war movie?


I don’t know, and frankly, I am afraid to ask……

quote:

This film is about the scale and horizon of the event,


I thought it was about Dunkirk….

quote:

…with little (except intermittently) focus on characters or the enemy. We do not have a chance to really get emotionally involved with any one character,

Well as it spares us from bizarre love triangles and lines like “Will this war ever catch up with us” that’s a good thing right?

quote:

I don’t actually think the Germans are The Enemy. If this is a film about survival and endurance, then the true enemy at Dunkirk is Time…..

Well, actually I think you’ll find that those bombs from the Stukas and Heinkels, the torpedoes, the rounds from the Messerschmitts, the artillery shells, the machine gun and the rifle fire does not emanate from old father time. It emanates from the German war machine. You see, the enemy were the Germans. Their shrinking of the Allied pocket around Dunkirk meant that time was of the essence – but old father time, the tooth fairy, the man in the moon? No. None of these were the enemy - it was the Germans.

quote:

When I think of a war movie, I think of Saving Private Ryan, Platoon, Patton, Enemy at the Gates, The Longest Day.


… and Dunkirk…..

quote:

The classical formula is that it is largely army especially infantry centric (though not always) with the focus on a small group of characters (the band of brothers) that we get to know and follow through the film.


Okay that is a ‘classic’ formula but it doesn’t make Dunkirk not a war film. And if you think the ‘classic’ formula always makes for a good war film well I defy you to find anyone (with a brain) that was pleased to get to know Rafe and his sidekick (whatever his name was) or anyone who actually followed the chuckle brothers on their ridiculous journey during which they saved Britain, blew off the Japanese and then bombed the crap out of Tokyo – all the while porking some nurse and getting Mr Pres so riled up he gets out of his wheelchair....

quote:

There is often gritty, intense combat portrayed showing the harm and carnage of war (blood and other war porn elements) and we are invited to identify with the heroes/protagonists and feel enmity towards the enemy who are portrayed as evil, wrong, mean, cruel and all things to be despised.


But this is relatively new. War films – even films that you would consider a war film but were made in a different age, didn’t centre on blood and guts. They were often more subtle. Back to Dunkirk, how many people don’t know the hideousness of the Nazi regime? I identified with the protagonists during Dunkirk. When Tom Hardy and his Scottish flying partner were flying around in the Spitfire I did not feel that I was missing out because I hadn’t previously seen them in some embarrassingly god-awful scene with a tasty nurse…..

Furthermore, this lack of getting to know the characters didn’t matter a jot to my elder warspite who was heartbroken by the fate of both George and the Frenchman.

quote:

Good versus evil with a decisive battle or event as part of a clear narrative arch that results in redemption, victory and resolution.


Who – please….. WHO watching Dunkirk did not know the backstory? That this was good vs evil? A decisive battle?? What do you actually think was happening? Why were all these ships being sunk and troops being bombed? Throughout the film it was made clear. “We need our army back”. Comment was made that “we are saving our aircraft and ships for the battle to come” and “victory is survival”. I mean how much clearer can it be made? The troops themselves thought they would be vilified upon their return - but when the public, expecting nothing but the worst, suddenly find that their army has returned thanks to a heroic effort (and thus there will be no surrender) - the relief far outweighs any anger or disappointment about the battle.

quote:

This film has none of that. Oh there is combat, but there is little blood – although still a great deal of grit, messiness and destruction.


Yes, it’s a war film. There is probably as much blood as in Dam Busters or Battle of Britain or the Green Berets.

quote:

There are a few moments of heroism, but they come mostly at the hands of civilians rescuing soldier, which of course upends the traditional war movie trope of civilians as victims.


Right that’s because it happened. Why does that not make this a war film? How many war films have civilians helping escaping POW’s (Great Escape) or helping commandoes in their bid to assassinate high ranking Nazi’s (Operation Daybreak) or just generally helping (A Bridge Too Far). Schindler’s List is a war movie. Lots of civilians in that one – including Oscar himself.

quote:

This is not a war movie.


Really? Did you just repeat that again after all I’ve told you?

quote:

…..it highlights this really interesting question about what a war movie is and what it is supposed to do. I wonder if we need to think more deeply about what a war movie ought to be and what it ought to do?


Er…. entertain, tell a story….. er…. where are we going with this?

quote:

Should it follow the standard hero/action film formula with a clear and unambiguous moral message and arc? What level of blood and carnage (and of what kind – individual versus collective) should be present and seen? And what do these expectations say about how we want to think about war? How do these expectations then shape how we think about and experience (for those who fight) actual wars?


Why does there need to be some kind of standard? There never has been before. Tastes, ideas, story-telling, realism – these are all elements that come and go like fashions. Why are some people getting on one over Dunkirk?

quote:

This film is a search for meaning when the standard meanings and narrative frames have utterly failed.


I think you are over-thinking this one. What meaning and narrative frames (whatever they are) have failed? Look how complicated is it? Britain and France are on their way to defeat. The cream of the French and practically the entire British armies are surrounded. Those in the know realised the French were finished. The British likely would be unless they get their army home. It’s a race against time because the Germans are closing the vice. Right what the hell are you searching for here?

quote:

How do we find meaning when we are one speck on a beach just trying to get out alive……. and there seems little that any individual can do to change the course of events?


Ask the poor sods at Omaha? Where's the difference? Apart from the fact that one is trying to get off the beach inland and the other off the beach onto a boat/ship.

quote:

Even Branagh as a high ranking naval officer seems bound and stuck, just as much as the grunt.


It’s called war – and its sheer bloody hell. The fact one has egg on their hats does not give them all the answers when all is turning to crap. Although Branagh’s real life character (probably William Tennant) was instrumental in identifying the importance of the Mole.

quote:

The reading (by one of the returning soldiers) at the end of the film of Churchill’s famous speech feels mocking and stirring at the same time.


Mocking? Why? What was mocking about it? Stirring yes, but I must have missed the mocking as I was too busy removing a massive lump from my throat and wiping a tear or two from the old visage.

quote:

The soldier who reads the speech has just escaped with his life and returned home to acclaim, dirty, perhaps traumatized and exhausted. Normally that is the victorious end. But here it is only the beginning.


We are back to where we were at the start. Allow me to explain: NO. IT ISN’T. Was it the end once Midway was won? Did they all pack up and go home after surrounding the Germans at Stalingrad? Did the Germans surrender after Battle of Britain – or was that just another beginning? Were no more RN ships sunk after the (Sink the) Bismarck? Just how many war films actually show the victorious end? From that point of view Dunkirk is no different to 99% of war films - so why all this psycho-babble about existential thingumabobs?


I haven't bothered to comment on the other post on that website as, unlike this one, its essentially just a negative review. No problem, that his opinion (although wrong imo) - but unlike this article at least he's not trying to be oh so clever, spouting nonsense about the answer to life, the universe and everything



warspite1

Hi Skyros, yes I did (it was that review that I commented on right at the end of my rant). Because his view was essentially his opinion there wasn't much to say, I mean I think he's wrong, but that's his view. What riled me about this article was that I think she was just trying to be too clever - and her analysis was way off as a result. Not a war film as 'Americans' see war films - good grief. I think she just wrote a load of pretentious mumbo-jumbo.

_____________________________

England expects that every man will do his duty. Horatio Nelson October 1805



(in reply to Skyros)
Post #: 212
RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/29/2017 8:29:39 PM   
geofflambert


Posts: 14863
Joined: 12/23/2010
From: St. Louis
Status: offline
All's Quiet on the Western Front and Paths of Glory didn't make your list?

(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 213
RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/29/2017 8:32:44 PM   
geofflambert


Posts: 14863
Joined: 12/23/2010
From: St. Louis
Status: offline
Seven Days in May isn't your typical war movie and it was fiction to boot, but a hell of a good movie.

(in reply to geofflambert)
Post #: 214
RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/29/2017 8:34:03 PM   
geofflambert


Posts: 14863
Joined: 12/23/2010
From: St. Louis
Status: offline
Of course, if we let fiction in, there's Mars Attacks!

(in reply to geofflambert)
Post #: 215
RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/29/2017 9:46:53 PM   
joey


Posts: 1408
Joined: 5/8/2004
From: Johnstown, PA
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: geofflambert

Seven Days in May isn't your typical war movie and it was fiction to boot, but a hell of a good movie.


Sorry I don't follow the argument above. Not sure why we should be arguing about an event 70 years ago, but that is me.
I would add the movie Fail Safe to the list with Seven Day in May. Another great non typical war movie.

(in reply to geofflambert)
Post #: 216
RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/30/2017 5:01:38 AM   
Jorge_Stanbury


Posts: 4320
Joined: 2/29/2012
From: Toronto and Lima
Status: offline
I saw it and I didn't like it. Felt like a disaster movie, with the Germans taking the place of cloverfield monster. And although there was beautiful cinematography, it was too slow and repetitive. Only the air scenes paid the ticket and even those were too predictable, Germans easily killed

Top 5 war movies IMO:
Das boot
Dr Strangelove
Platoon
Full metal jacket
Black Hawk down

Honorable mentions: admiral Yamamoto, letters from Iwo Jima, battle of Britain, Tora Tora Tora, band of Brothers,

I would had added Det untergang, Apocalypse now and paths of glory, but these are not true war movies IMO, more like something happening during the war

< Message edited by Jorge_Stanbury -- 7/30/2017 5:21:58 AM >

(in reply to joey)
Post #: 217
RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/30/2017 7:03:21 AM   
warspite1


Posts: 41353
Joined: 2/2/2008
From: England
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: joey

Sorry I don't follow the argument above. Not sure why we should be arguing about an event 70 years ago, but that is me.

warspite1

Argument? There is a healthy and interesting debate been taking place about the film Dunkirk and to a lesser extent about what took place at Dunkirk and the events leading up to it. Are you suggesting that historical events shouldn't be re-appraised and re-told?


_____________________________

England expects that every man will do his duty. Horatio Nelson October 1805



(in reply to joey)
Post #: 218
RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/30/2017 7:57:26 AM   
warspite1


Posts: 41353
Joined: 2/2/2008
From: England
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: geofflambert

All's Quiet on the Western Front and Paths of Glory didn't make your list?
warspite1

No, getting down to a 12 was difficult enough. Having said that, I've only see All's Quiet once and I don't recall that much about it - other than the final scene. Paths of Glory I haven't even heard of until now.


< Message edited by warspite1 -- 7/30/2017 8:01:43 AM >


_____________________________

England expects that every man will do his duty. Horatio Nelson October 1805



(in reply to geofflambert)
Post #: 219
RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/30/2017 8:13:32 AM   
Orm


Posts: 22154
Joined: 5/3/2008
From: Sweden
Status: offline
I am surprised that no one has yet mentioned We Were Soldiers. Although the book which it is based on were even better.

_____________________________

Have a bit more patience with newbies. Of course some of them act dumb -- they're often students, for heaven's sake. - Terry Pratchett

(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 220
RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/30/2017 11:36:40 AM   
Reg


Posts: 2787
Joined: 5/26/2000
From: NSW, Australia
Status: offline

I went to see Dunkirk today and I thought it was quite good.

Not your standard war movie but isn't that what cinema is all about. The three different story lines running at different time rates and constantly crossing over was an interesting story telling device and worked well.

I think that those who did not like this film were expecting a Captain Kirk to come sweeping in to save the day. Sorry guys it didn't happen.

I guess they would not get the movie "The Snow Goose" either...



< Message edited by Reg -- 7/30/2017 11:37:29 AM >


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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/30/2017 3:46:18 PM   
Jorge_Stanbury


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Reg

I think that those who did not like this film were expecting a Captain Kirk to come sweeping in to save the day. Sorry guys it didn't happen.



Well in the end it was Britannia herself, personified by brave common men and women who came sweeping. German planes retreated as soon as they arrived. Even the sun started to shine.

Without spoiling it for those that haven't seen it. It's neither a historian movie nor a dialogue/ well developed character movie. Instead it is a series of vignettes showing how was the evacuation experience like, assuming very bad luck... Because if this had been the standard I doubt more than a few thousands would had been saved

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/30/2017 4:08:34 PM   
warspite1


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Jorge_Stanbury


quote:

ORIGINAL: Reg

I think that those who did not like this film were expecting a Captain Kirk to come sweeping in to save the day. Sorry guys it didn't happen.



Well in the end it was Britannia herself, personified by brave common men and women who came sweeping. German planes retreated as soon as they arrived. Even the sun started to shine.

Without spoiling it for those that haven't seen it. It's neither a historian movie nor a dialogue/ well developed character movie. Instead it is a series of vignettes showing how was the evacuation experience like, assuming very bad luck... Because if this had been the standard I doubt more than a few thousands would had been saved
warspite1

Firstly I respectfully disagree with Reg - I can't recall that any of the comments, from people that don't like Dunkirk, that suggested its because of that kind of reason.

But equally, in order to make any money and be in any way interesting, no film is going to show the elements that ran well because it would be dull. Men on mole, destroyer arrives, men get on destroyer, men get home.

Even had the film concentrated on the destroyers (which saved 2/3rd of the men) then the film makers would still be concentrating on those journeys that suffered the bad luck. They would, like the film actually did, concentrate on those that were mined, bombed, strafed, sunk - and sadly there would be plenty to choose from. An obvious example would be HMS Wakeful that sunk with all but one of the troops she was rescuing - and only 25 of her crew. And these were picked up by HMS Grafton that was in turn sunk.


< Message edited by warspite1 -- 7/30/2017 5:15:20 PM >


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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/30/2017 4:35:07 PM   
zuluhour


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saw it last night, there was a preview of a "Churchill" movie I want to see, I thought Dunkirk was.......so.

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/30/2017 4:50:07 PM   
warspite1


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quote:

ORIGINAL: zuluhour

saw it last night, there was a preview of a "Churchill" movie I want to see, I thought Dunkirk was.......so.
warspite1

You mean this one? This has a quality cast and a half - really looking forward to this.

Darkest Hour
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt4555426/videoplayer/vi818329881?ref_=tt_ov_vi


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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/30/2017 5:09:16 PM   
zuluhour


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yes sir!

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/30/2017 6:52:30 PM   
BBfanboy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1


quote:

ORIGINAL: zuluhour

saw it last night, there was a preview of a "Churchill" movie I want to see, I thought Dunkirk was.......so.
warspite1

You mean this one? This has a quality cast and a half - really looking forward to this.

Darkest Hour
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt4555426/videoplayer/vi818329881?ref_=tt_ov_vi


There was a TV serial about Churchill that also had Gary Oldman as star. I thought he was very good in the role. The new movie looks like a similar portrayal.

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/30/2017 7:47:13 PM   
joey


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Jorge_Stanbury

I saw it and I didn't like it. Felt like a disaster movie, with the Germans taking the place of cloverfield monster. And although there was beautiful cinematography, it was too slow and repetitive. Only the air scenes paid the ticket and even those were too predictable, Germans easily killed

Top 5 war movies IMO:
Das boot
Dr Strangelove
Platoon
Full metal jacket
Black Hawk down

Honorable mentions: admiral Yamamoto, letters from Iwo Jima, battle of Britain, Tora Tora Tora, band of Brothers,

I would had added Det untergang, Apocalypse now and paths of glory, but these are not true war movies IMO, more like something happening during the war


I think my number two after Private Ryan would be Apocalypse Now. This would be follow by the Good Doctor Strangelove. My wife's favorite is Das Boot. Too bad that most films today are more Hollywood and less real wood....

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/30/2017 7:51:23 PM   
BBfanboy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: joey


quote:

ORIGINAL: Jorge_Stanbury

I saw it and I didn't like it. Felt like a disaster movie, with the Germans taking the place of cloverfield monster. And although there was beautiful cinematography, it was too slow and repetitive. Only the air scenes paid the ticket and even those were too predictable, Germans easily killed

Top 5 war movies IMO:
Das boot
Dr Strangelove
Platoon
Full metal jacket
Black Hawk down

Honorable mentions: admiral Yamamoto, letters from Iwo Jima, battle of Britain, Tora Tora Tora, band of Brothers,

I would had added Det untergang, Apocalypse now and paths of glory, but these are not true war movies IMO, more like something happening during the war


I think my number two after Private Ryan would be Apocalypse Now. This would be follow by the Good Doctor Strangelove. My wife's favorite is Das Boot. Too bad that most films today are more Hollywood and less real wood....


You mean the "1941" scene with the naked lady clinging to the periscope and the Japanese sailor sighing "Horrywood" wasn't good wood material?

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/30/2017 8:28:18 PM   
Jorge_Stanbury


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quote:

ORIGINAL: BBfanboy


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1


quote:

ORIGINAL: zuluhour

saw it last night, there was a preview of a "Churchill" movie I want to see, I thought Dunkirk was.......so.
warspite1

You mean this one? This has a quality cast and a half - really looking forward to this.

Darkest Hour
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt4555426/videoplayer/vi818329881?ref_=tt_ov_vi


There was a TV serial about Churchill that also had Gary Oldman as star. I thought he was very good in the role. The new movie looks like a similar portrayal.


I also saw the trailer yesterday; and I will definitively watch it, but so far, I am a bit disappointed Gary Oldman couldn't match Churchill's powerful voice; his "we will fight on the beaches" speech pales compared to the real deal

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/30/2017 8:35:11 PM   
Chickenboy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Reg
I think that those who did not like this film were expecting a Captain Kirk to come sweeping in to save the day. Sorry guys it didn't happen.


Ummm...no. My reasons for thinking the movie was mediocre were (I thought) well spelled out above. I don't need the condescending 'expecting Kirk to come sweeping in' claptrap nonsense just because I voiced a reasoned contrary opinion.

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/30/2017 8:37:36 PM   
Chickenboy


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Events in the Far East are making me need to watch the first 20 minutes of "By Dawn's Early Light" again. Not in a good way either.

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/31/2017 12:04:05 AM   
IdahoNYer


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Saw Dunkirk today, and have been looking forward to it from the first trailers.

Gotta say, I was underwhelmed....

Didn't convey the scale of the operation, and the director's editing drove me batty....day - night - day....wait? The scenes are tied in?? Was kinda similar to the "Thin Red Line"

Did enjoy the aerial scenes a bit, although not sure the Spitfire carried enough ammo to down what....5 or 6 planes I lost count?? And that Heinkel had to have had the longest bomb approach on that minesweeper in history!

And by the time Tom Hardy's Spit's glide after running out of fuel finally ended, all the Brits had been evacuated!!! Wow!!!

Guess my taste in war movies goes in a bit of different direction....my top five, in no real order...

- Das Boot
- The Cross of Iron
- The Train
- The Longest Day
- Tora Tora Tora

Plenty others better than Dunkirk......I'd rate Dunkirk slightly below "Fury"...

At least it didn't try to overwhelm the audience with over the top CGI effects, I'll give it that.

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/31/2017 2:28:54 AM   
Footslogger


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You know what I find interesting about these movies though. When I ask co-workers have you ever heard of Joseph Stalin, Dunkirk or D-Day, they are completely clueless. Both young and middle-aged. I actually marvel how most people don't know history in general. In my opinion, these movies help educate what they didn't learn or forgot in school.

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/31/2017 2:42:39 AM   
patrickl


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Can't blame them. History esp military history is not everyone's hobby. Same as geography or all other sciences. Live and let live.

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/31/2017 3:39:45 AM   
BBfanboy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: patrickl

Can't blame them. History esp military history is not everyone's hobby. Same as geography or all other sciences. Live and let live.

Gotta disagree here. If you want to have a vision of where we are going you need enough history to understand how we got here and what mistakes were made along the way. Then you need to know enough geography to understand how it affects relations between countries and groups, especially trade and security.
People who think only their own neighbourhood matters will get a rude shock when the rest of the world comes calling.

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/31/2017 4:22:46 AM   
spence

 

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quote:

People who think only their own neighbourhood matters will get a rude shock when the rest of the world comes calling.


+1

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/31/2017 6:01:18 AM   
warspite1


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Dunkirk spoiler alert

quote:

ORIGINAL: IdahoNYer

....although not sure the Spitfire carried enough ammo to down what....5 or 6 planes I lost count?? And that Heinkel had to have had the longest bomb approach on that minesweeper in history!

And by the time Tom Hardy's Spit's glide after running out of fuel finally ended, all the Brits had been evacuated!!! Wow!!!

warspite1

I'll need to see it a third time to try and confirm how many aircraft were shot down by Farrier. Remember we see the same scenes more than once from different perspectives - so I don't think he shoots down that many. But regardless, yes he does seem to have too much ammunition.

As for the landing - there is nothing that I can recall that says Farrier landed on Dunkirk beach - in fact that would seem somewhat unlikely given that it would have been full of troops. But you know there is more than one beach in Northern France/Belgium


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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/31/2017 3:36:36 PM   
ElvisDaKing


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came yesterday to Watch movie, and a bit disappointed...

Well it s a nice movie with some great scenes and the 3 mixed stories - air-sea-land- is interesting, but i think Nolan missed 2 critical points :
- It doesnt show the large scale of the situation : we are talking about hundred of thousands soldiers trapped on the beaches and we can see hardly hundreds, especially that Nolan likes to make large views...
- We don t feel the critical moment it was during the war, especially for the british government which had to repatriate its professional army from the continent when all the odds seemed to show that it was to be captured and almost nothing left to protect UK...


Just to add, as a frenchman, after seeing some remarks on the Net and even on some french publication, blaming Nolan's movie for ignoring the french fighting during Dunkirk battle...
Well as a personal note, i don t have this feeling as the movie is not about the full battle itself but about 3 specific and different points of view, but i can understand that some people felt a missed opportunity to give justice back to french army which fought bravly and efficiently during these days, but again it was not the purpose of the movie...
Unfortunately after armistice signed, Vichy regime propaganda used Dunkirk events to pretend that french army was abandonned by its former allies in order to raise anti british feeling among public opinion, and when Republic reinstalled after liberation, everybody wanted to forget about the defeated 1940 army and celebrate the 1944/45 army which participated in Europe liberation ...

Actually it could be a nice war movie by itself, fighting an unwinnable battle, trying to delay as much as possible the unavoidable defeat, just to protect the evacuation of the rest of the army, trapped on the beaches of dunkirk...
But not sure that a 1940 french soldier war movie would attract an international interest, required for a today movie success...



< Message edited by ElvisDaKing -- 7/31/2017 3:50:56 PM >


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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/31/2017 4:52:25 PM   
warspite1


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quote:

ORIGINAL: ElvisDaKing

came yesterday to Watch movie, and a bit disappointed...

Well it s a nice movie with some great scenes and the 3 mixed stories - air-sea-land- is interesting, but i think Nolan missed 2 critical points :
- It doesnt show the large scale of the situation : we are talking about hundred of thousands soldiers trapped on the beaches and we can see hardly hundreds, especially that Nolan likes to make large views...
- We don t feel the critical moment it was during the war, especially for the british government which had to repatriate its professional army from the continent when all the odds seemed to show that it was to be captured and almost nothing left to protect UK...


Just to add, as a frenchman, after seeing some remarks on the Net and even on some french publication, blaming Nolan's movie for ignoring the french fighting during Dunkirk battle...
Well as a personal note, i don t have this feeling as the movie is not about the full battle itself but about 3 specific and different points of view, but i can understand that some people felt a missed opportunity to give justice back to french army which fought bravly and efficiently during these days, but again it was not the purpose of the movie...
Unfortunately after armistice signed, Vichy regime propaganda used Dunkirk events to pretend that french army was abandonned by its former allies in order to raise anti british feeling among public opinion, and when Republic reinstalled after liberation, everybody wanted to forget about the defeated 1940 army and celebrate the 1944/45 army which participated in Europe liberation ...

Actually it could be a nice war movie by itself, fighting an unwinnable battle, trying to delay as much as possible the unavoidable defeat, just to protect the evacuation of the rest of the army, trapped on the beaches of dunkirk...
But not sure that a 1940 french soldier war movie would attract an international interest, required for a today movie success...


warspite1

Nice measured view sir!

But I would pick up on three points

quote:

- It doesnt show the large scale of the situation : we are talking about hundred of thousands soldiers trapped on the beaches and we can see hardly hundreds, especially that Nolan likes to make large views...


I think this is down to style - I mean there is the 'lay it on with a trowel, bash them over the head with it' approach or there is a more subtle way. Not saying that either is necessarily right or wrong (I guess it depends on the movie). But I think it is made clear in the limited dialogue that there are "400,000 men on that beach" and later at the end when they discuss the fact that "almost 300,000 have been evacuated so far". So I don't think its missed - perhaps the point could have been made in a more obvious way?

quote:

- We don t feel the critical moment it was during the war, especially for the british government which had to repatriate its professional army from the continent when all the odds seemed to show that it was to be captured and almost nothing left to protect UK...


Similarly I don't think this was missed, but once again could have been made more obvious - e.g. a shot back to Churchill in the House of Commons or at the War Cabinet spelling out the problem. But, as I say, it wasn't missed. When the Admiral comes over and talks to the SNO and the Colonel, he makes clear that "we need our army back" because "the Germans won't stop here" and something along the lines that we are next. Again, its a more understated approach for better or worse, but it wasn't missed.

quote:

- but i can understand that some people felt a missed opportunity to give justice back to french army which fought bravly and efficiently during these days


I'm interest to know; as a Frenchman, did you not get the sense that the French were recognised:
- during the opening scene the French were defending the perimeter while the retreating English soldier was motioned away to the beach (a look of contempt on one Poilu's face).
- Reference was made numerous (three?) times to the fact that the French were holding the perimeter - and must have been fighting to the end because Branagh makes the point he is not leaving the mole as he's waiting for the French. Again I think its a matter of degree, but did you not feel that to be the case?

Thanks.

< Message edited by warspite1 -- 7/31/2017 4:54:44 PM >


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