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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/24/2017 7:03:31 PM   
Chickenboy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: witpqs

Even though obviously many liked it those observations are disappointing. The surrounding story and the scale of Dunkirk is amazing. A series of close-in scenes cannot do that justice. I'll wait to see it on TV.

Did any of you see it in Imax?

Yes. Saw it on IMAX. Beautiful cinematography and sound editing. The aerial scenes were well done, I thought.

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/24/2017 10:55:08 PM   
rustysi


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quote:

If you recall certain sections of the British media got all huffy because Saving Private Ryan didn't mention British/Canadian involvement on D-Day. This despite the fact that Saving Private Ryan


I agree that 'Ryan' was an 'American' thing, I don't agree that Dunkirk was all British, and I'm not saying you've said that either. Now I haven't seen the film and I'm not knocking the British if they don't say much about the French. Besides, to me anyway, I can say a lot of negative about the French handling of the battle to that point as it was their 'show' so to speak and they botched the whole affair. But the French were deeply involved in Dunkirk and its success. The British did in fact remove some 70 to 80000 Frenchmen IIRC. Also IRL there was also a British office (whose name escapes me) who compared the stand of the French to that of Spartans at Thermopylae IIRC. So maybe some of these things, or others could have been included, and I'm not saying they weren't as I've not seen the show yet. OTOH the writers and director may have not seen them as necessary to their story. After all its their call. For me at least when I see a film my usual response is to find out what really happened, and get the whole story as films usually only give us 'bits'. That is if I'm interested enough.

Anyway I guess my point is let the French get upset if they wish and it may seem to me that they're 'just looking for a sense of outrage where none is necessary or warranted', also when I see the film. Hey its nice to see the French 'annoyed' at someone else, as its usually us.

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/25/2017 5:31:42 AM   
warspite1


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quote:

I don't agree that Dunkirk was all British, and I'm not saying you've said that either.


That's good because, for the avoidance of doubt, I have said nothing of the sort. I have said that Dunkirk is a film that centres on the British experience of Dunkirk. As I have also made clear I am in no way shape or form interested in French bashing. But Dunkirk was different for the British and the French (although for reasons that were probably only realised by a few at the time). The French, sadly, were effectively defeated by the time of Dunkirk – fighting on from Britain/North Africa was a possibility but it depended upon who was in power – and as we know Reynaud lost that battle and for Petain, that was not going to happen. For the British, there was no question of giving in but they needed their army back. Therefore the evacuation – and its effect, although a defeat - can be seen in a very different light. As the film says – victory is survival. The British survived to fight on and thus Dunkirk was a key moment for Britain, and for the course of the war.

quote:

I can say a lot of negative about the French handling of the battle to that point as it was their 'show' so to speak and they botched the whole affair.


That is outside of the scope of the film but yes, exactly. And Nolan could have taken the approach of others (e.g. Stalingrad and blaming the Romanians, Saving Private Ryan and Monty bashing) here and chosen to bash the French anyway by adding into the dialogue some disparaging remarks about Sedan and the performance on the Meuse that led to the debacle. But I am pleased to say he didn't take such obvious - and unnecessary action.

The Battle of France was a fight to save France, the French – as a continental power and defending their own country - obviously had the large army, their generals ran the show, the plan for defence was theirs. Sadly, they blew it. Too many reasons to go into here for something that is out of scope for Dunkirk, but a fascinating - and incredibly sad episode and I feel very sorry for the French. Especially those – and there were a great many – who fought so bravely in defence of their country.

quote:

But the French were deeply involved in Dunkirk and its success.


Yes, and Nolan (quite rightly) recognised the French contribution – see my previous post - without making this a film about them.

quote:

The British did in fact remove some 70 to 80000 Frenchmen IIRC.


I believe some 120,000 French were evacuated – and, in addition to the sterling work done by French troops, the French navy and air force had a hand in this – a much smaller hand but a hand nonetheless. No one is saying they didn’t. But in a film with 3 Spitfires and one Blenheim, in a film with one 'RN'‘destroyer’ and a few ‘minesweepers’, how many French aircraft and ships should Nolan have shown in a film specifically about the British experience?

quote:

So maybe some of these things, or others could have been included


I believe, given the scope of the film, sufficient recognition was given to the French – others views may vary and when you've seen the film you can decide for yourself whether the acknowledgement is sufficient or not.

quote:

Hey its nice to see the French 'annoyed' at someone else, as its usually us


Usually the US??? Seriously? Hey, try living with the French as the British have tried for a 1,000 years and then we can talk! (And no my French brothers that is not a sideswipe at you guys – you can of course swap French and British around in that sentence!).


< Message edited by warspite1 -- 7/25/2017 4:31:52 PM >


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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/25/2017 2:54:59 PM   
Macclan5


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If I Recall Correctly:

Saving Private Ryan was a screen play adapted from the works of Stephen Ambrose (DDay,Band of Brothers,Lewis and Clarke, Eisenhower, Nixon etc). Further Ambrose consulted on the film. Stephen Ambrose was an award winning American Historian who wrote uniquely of the American Experience. No news there and no criticism should be leveled at the film for what was always intended to be a film on the American Experience.

Dunkirk : Nolan consciously omitted all scenes and references to Generals, Churchill, and "era" politics as I recall ; he wrote the screen play on a ferry crossing from Britain to France and based concepts from 'Alls Quiet on the Western Front' - or so it was expressed in one of those "Entertainment TV shows". No criticism should be leveled at the film for omitting what was never intended to be in scope.

--

Based upon opinion it sounds like a great film once a person adjusts expectations from 'documentary' to 'historical narrative'

Have my ticket for the weekend.

"Classic old time Drive In Movie Theater" north of the city some distance.

Like this beloved game AE - I care less about the High Def graphics and more about ambiance and 'honest portrayal'

Cheers


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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/25/2017 11:08:26 PM   
bush

 

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Saw it Saturday and was disappointed. I had not read anything before seeing it and WAS expecting a more "big picture" story. I went with my daughter and she said it was very confusing and really did not add to her understanding of what happened.

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/25/2017 11:23:24 PM   
Big B

 

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Haven't seen it. Honestly have had no desire to see it - or any other contemporary movie about WW2.
I have a brother in the movie industry for over 30 years now as a screen writer, and I understand now that the industry pays scant attention to history.
I assume now all that movies will be closer related to stories of the Jedi and The Force - than tedious "history".

So I give all of them an automatic "whatever"... it would be nice to be shown how wrong I am.

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/26/2017 1:02:36 AM   
pmelheck1

 

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I saw Dunkirk and enjoyed it. I never watch any movie expecting a history lesson. My expectations with war movies is they will get everything wrong and then make stuff up and throw it in to spice up the story. I went didn't go into Dunkirk expecting anything so didn't have any preconceived notions. I viewed it as an in the trenches type of story, the average soldier during the battle didn't have a clue what was going on way up the chain of command. There are always things left out in every story told due to time or space constraints. It's a matter of who's telling the story as to what is left out and the bias that all stories have and what point of view/perspective.


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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/26/2017 1:24:45 AM   
geofflambert


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I saw it. It was fine. It could have used a score. It did make it clear that private vessels did the bulk of the work. It did reference French troops being evacuated but could have gone into more detail. Fictionalized history. Nothing wrong with that when its trying to look at what really happened through the eyes of fictional characters. Then of course we have the movie that shall not be spoken of. Dunkirk was not a documentary but a piece of art and should be judged that way. How about Tom Hardy? I swear that guy is the man of a thousand faces. I've seen him in a hundred things and I never recognize him.

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/26/2017 1:53:43 PM   
Skyros


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have not seen it yet but found this review interesting.

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

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/26/2017 3:36:05 PM   
Chickenboy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Skyros

have not seen it yet but found this review interesting.

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



Read your review. Completely disagree.

This one's much closer to the mark:

https://warisboring.com/dunkirk-is-a-booming-bloodless-bore/

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/26/2017 4:00:20 PM   
Chickenboy


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I guess if one is to argue that this movie is really about the changes in men undergoing a crucible of fire and not about the military operation known as "Dunkirk" then...OK. But the title is misleading and a veritable non-sequitur. For gritty realism and the effect war has on men, there's many better places to look. The "Deer Hunter", "Apocalypse Now" and "When Trumpets Fade" immediately spring to mind. If we followed the naming convention of Nolan, the former should be called "Hue" the middle "Da Nang" and the latter "The Huertgen Forest". In fact, the stories can be told with only the thinnest veneer of a connection to the historical realm and are not predicated on a namesake battle at all.

My interest in seeing a series of vignettes-various snippets from Dunkirk-related activities was not as acute as seeing a more complete depiction of "Dunkirk". Of course, your mileage may vary.

As I think back on the movie, I like some aspects of it less. The story of the two men on the beach (including the one Frenchman) trying-in vain-to escape and repeatedly having ships sink under them was tedious. What was the grand total-four? OK. I get it. Lots of ships sunk and some fortunate men escaping them. But Nolan dwelt on this curiosity far too long. Instead of some character development and interesting dialogue, we're treated to Y.E.T. A.N.O.T.H.E.R ship going out from under these two poor blighters. Tiresome and redundant.

For the most part, I thought the aerial scenes were well-filmed and choreographed. Other than the self-serving "plane porn", pretty movies and sound turned up past 11, I really fail to see any character development, or other connection to the historical context. Those RAF pilots could just as easily have been flying CAP over Malta for all the difference it made to the movie and the connection to "Dunkirk".

So, was the film shot professionally? Yes. Was it at least plausible acting and a screenplay? Yes. Were the individual vignettes entertaining or worthwhile to watch? Yes. Was it 'All that and a packet of peanuts'? No.



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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/26/2017 7:18:42 PM   
Orm


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quote:

ORIGINAL: geofflambert

I saw it. It was fine. It could have used a score. It did make it clear that private vessels did the bulk of the work. It did reference French troops being evacuated but could have gone into more detail. Fictionalized history. Nothing wrong with that when its trying to look at what really happened through the eyes of fictional characters. Then of course we have the movie that shall not be spoken of. Dunkirk was not a documentary but a piece of art and should be judged that way. How about Tom Hardy? I swear that guy is the man of a thousand faces. I've seen him in a hundred things and I never recognize him.

I am pretty sure that the RN ships rescued most of the soldiers.

Therefore it might have been better if the focus would have been on a RN destroyer, or another RN ship. That might not have been a equally good story but would have shed a better light on events. I suspect this is a common misunderstanding.

I am sure that there are plenty here that can correct me if I am wrong about this. Maybe someone even has figures?

< Message edited by Orm -- 7/26/2017 7:19:11 PM >


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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/26/2017 8:24:26 PM   
bush

 

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Chickenboy - +1

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/26/2017 8:44:26 PM   
BBfanboy


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Yes, the DDs ferried the vast majority of the troops back to England, but because of shallow water the little boats were the ones that went inshore to load the troops and get them to the DDs. The Germans bombed the larger ships but they also strafed the small boats. Considering they were civilians, volunteers and many very old or young they deserve their kudos without taking away from the other ships in the operation.

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/26/2017 10:38:17 PM   
Jorge_Stanbury


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I will watch it this weekend

in the meantime, I am checking this documentary: The Other Side of Dunkirk; about the view of the 1940 Dunkirk evacuation from the position of the French and Germans.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IcX8NvJPOFc


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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/27/2017 1:12:39 AM   
RFalvo69


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Big B

Haven't seen it. Honestly have had no desire to see it - or any other contemporary movie about WW2.
I have a brother in the movie industry for over 30 years now as a screen writer, and I understand now that the industry pays scant attention to history.


Dunkirk is much, MUCH more historical than many other movies. Then the point of view is moved to the experiences of individual soldiers - as it is in the Omaha Beach scene of Saving Private Ryan. Many people do seem to have and hard time in understanding this. Maybe they didn't watch SPR either because "there was an excess of Jedi Knights" - I really don't know.

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/27/2017 1:14:27 AM   
spence

 

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If one wants a docudrama that tells the "whole" story you might watch a production of the BBC from about 10 years ago on YouTube. Three parts (3 hours) and covers the ships, the soldiers, the big picture (can't remember if it gives the French their due - nothing pops to mind anyways)...pretty good and based on the memories/notes of actual participants. IIRC it was part of a bunch of BBC documentaries about WW2. I enjoyed it anyways.

Dang - I watched it twice months ago when the present movie was just a twinkle in Christopher Nolan's eye but now it seems to have disappeared.


< Message edited by spence -- 7/27/2017 1:30:43 AM >

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/27/2017 2:53:04 AM   
39battalion


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I saw it yesterday.

My verdict : It was okay. Just okay. Three and a half stars out of five.

I thought it was too disjointed to present a coherent story.

And the music was terribly invasive. Very loud and at times inappropriate. I think it is a mistake to think you can heighten tension by cranking up the volume.
Often the atmosphere of a scene is best captured by the absence of music or a more subtle use of music.

So IMHO the best war movie of all time remains Das Boot.

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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/27/2017 6:00:59 AM   
warspite1


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Jorge_Stanbury

I will watch it this weekend

in the meantime, I am checking this documentary: The Other Side of Dunkirk; about the view of the 1940 Dunkirk evacuation from the position of the French and Germans.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IcX8NvJPOFc


warspite1

Thank for sharing Jorge_Stanbury.

This is a very good, fair, documentary. As was to be expected with the launch of Dunkirk, regardless of what anyone thinks of the qualities (or otherwise) of the film itself, there is a lot of ill-informed rubbish being spoken on social media about the campaign and what happened back in May/June 1940. This documentary is pretty good at bringing out, at reasonably high level, what actually happened and explains why so much nonsense was written from the British, French and German 'sides' in time of war - but that has then been carried on (and even amplified) in peace.


< Message edited by warspite1 -- 7/27/2017 6:25:08 AM >


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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/27/2017 6:14:39 AM   
warspite1


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quote:

ORIGINAL: 39battalion

And the music was terribly invasive. Very loud and at times inappropriate. I think it is a mistake to think you can heighten tension by cranking up the volume.
Often the atmosphere of a scene is best captured by the absence of music or a more subtle use of music.

warspite1

Dunkirk Spoiler Alert

I recall there was a lack of music in the opening scene of Saving Private Ryan. Considering what Spielberg was trying to achieve – really putting one on that beach – this was appropriate, and that really worked well.

But I would say in the vast majority of cases, the use of music is key to the success of a scene and there are music pieces that remain stand out – and these vary in styles, in intensity, in volume – but the point is, they all work in their own way.

Zimmer’s ‘music’ score (I use that term loosely ) worked really well in Dunkirk. Especially the climactic scene as the various strands came together – troops aboard the Dutch boat, the sinking ‘minesweeper’, the Spitfire/Me-109/Heinkel duel and the Moonstone’s rescue of the troops and sailors. Downloaded this for my ipod

On the other end of the music scale, can anyone, seriously, fail to be moved to tears by the classical pieces: Barber’s Adagio for Strings, used in Platoon or Albinoni’s Adagio in G Minor used in Gallipoli? Those strings cannot fail to break your heart.

Best overall soundtrack for a war film though imo; a war film set in 1942? David Hentschel’s music score for Operation Daybreak. And highlighting that there is no one correct treatment, this film features early electronic music (mid 70’s) – even pre Kraftwerk probably! And as for the closing scene….. oh boy…. Sadly the recordings were lost and the composer says it’s uneconomic to re-record. Terrible shame.

Platoon - Barber's Adagio for Strings
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=izQsgE0L450

Gallipoli - Albinoni's Adagio in G Minor
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XMbvcp480Y4

Operation Daybreak - Hentschel Main (start) and End Title (from 3 mins)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jylVzNRWa6I
The assassination attempt
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQhbnO0fu6A

Dunkirk - Zimmer
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n1VJ39nVIBk

< Message edited by warspite1 -- 7/29/2017 9:01:01 AM >


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RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/27/2017 6:09:36 PM   
warspite1


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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


< Message edited by warspite1 -- 7/29/2017 8:41:32 AM >


_____________________________

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



(in reply to Skyros)
Post #: 201
RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/27/2017 6:45:14 PM   
Anachro


Posts: 2506
Joined: 11/23/2015
From: The Coastal Elite
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Saw it Tuesday and I hated it, most likely for the same reasons I hated The Thin Red Line.

Was the cinematography good? Sure. Special effects? Nice. The story itself left much to be desired: no context, no character, a mishmash of vignettes with no real meaning, but artfully done I guess. If I had to venture its place in history, I'd say this will be a movie claimed a masterpiece by the press due to the laurels of its director and "tasteful" message on the human drama of war, but also one that no one would ever see more than once. Quickly forgotten over time.

My opinion.

EDIT

Actually, to edit, I'd say "hate" is a strong word. I watched it once and certainly didn't find it so bad as to walk out of the theater. It was interesting enough for one viewing, but I would never see it again. In that sense, I was very disappointed. It wasn't the "Dunkirk" I wanted to see.

< Message edited by Anachro -- 7/27/2017 6:52:04 PM >

(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 202
RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/27/2017 8:09:22 PM   
Canoerebel


Posts: 21100
Joined: 12/14/2002
From: Northwestern Georgia, USA
Status: offline
We're showing a sharp divergence in reaction to Dunkirk. Nothing wrong with that.

I heard last week that the movie was "the best of the year." Early reviews were stellar - 98% favorable at one point on Rotten Tomatoes. The trailers were awesome. The Forum was pretty jazzed about its prospects. My boys and I were too.

Then my boys and I sat together in a fairly crowded theater Saturday night. About thirty minutes into the movie, I had this startling thought: "This isn't very good so far." That was a surprising let down.

(in reply to Anachro)
Post #: 203
RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/28/2017 5:44:15 AM   
warspite1


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

ORIGINAL: Anachro

If I had to venture its place in history, I'd say this will be...... one that no one would ever see more than once.

warspite1

Well I saw it for the second time earlier this week

I have to say I thought it was even better second time around - largely due to the fact that I understood the timelines better and the way 'the week', 'the day' and 'the hour' stories interwove - whereas first time round I spent some time early in the film wondering why it went from day to night and back again before it clicked!

It was also good to watch in Imax the second time which meant the 'soundtrack' came through more prominently.

Were there things I would have liked to see? Yes of course, but I am not going to judge the film on what it could have been, I'm going to judge it on what I saw. The obvious comparison being Stalingrad. Like Dunkirk I was desperately looking forward to that film. Like Dunkirk I assumed, from the title, that I was going to get more of a story of that battle. In both cases I was to be disappointed. The difference though was stark. The way Stalingrad started - the troops being recalled from North Africa (iirc) and posted to Russia, the Hanomag in evidence when they arrived - seemed to confirm that this was going to be a seriously good film.... sadly it turned into a boring mess. Dunkirk on the other hand was a fine film and so my disappointment about 'what could have been' was nullified by the quality of what I saw - unlike Stalingrad where I was effectively disappointed twice.

And in further response to that quite ludicrous article from post 201, Stalingrad was a 'classic' war film, with characters we get to know and lots of dialogue, Didn't stop it being largely turgid though.....

But back to Dunkirk; a wonderfully enjoyable film first time - even more so second time round. Soundtrack already on the ipod and I will buy the DVD just as soon as it is available and will sit proudly alongside the other films in my personal top 12....except Das Boot, which for some reason I never actually bought I need to rectify that oversight...

1. Schindler's List
2. Battle of Britain
3. Conspiracy
4. Dunkirk
5. Waterloo
6. Operation Daybreak
7. Downfall
8. Das Boot
9. Tora, Tora, Tora
10. The Great Escape
11. Saving Private Ryan
12. Dam Busters

< Message edited by warspite1 -- 7/28/2017 6:44:04 AM >


_____________________________

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(in reply to Anachro)
Post #: 204
RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/28/2017 12:45:18 PM   
Chickenboy


Posts: 24520
Joined: 6/29/2002
From: San Antonio, TX
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Anachro

Saw it Tuesday and I hated it, most likely for the same reasons I hated The Thin Red Line.

Was the cinematography good? Sure. Special effects? Nice. The story itself left much to be desired: no context, no character, a mishmash of vignettes with no real meaning, but artfully done I guess. If I had to venture its place in history, I'd say this will be a movie claimed a masterpiece by the press due to the laurels of its director and "tasteful" message on the human drama of war, but also one that no one would ever see more than once. Quickly forgotten over time.

My opinion.

EDIT

Actually, to edit, I'd say "hate" is a strong word. I watched it once and certainly didn't find it so bad as to walk out of the theater. It was interesting enough for one viewing, but I would never see it again. In that sense, I was very disappointed. It wasn't the "Dunkirk" I wanted to see.


Aye. There's a lot of that going around.

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Post #: 205
RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/28/2017 12:50:42 PM   
Chickenboy


Posts: 24520
Joined: 6/29/2002
From: San Antonio, TX
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

We're showing a sharp divergence in reaction to Dunkirk. Nothing wrong with that.

I heard last week that the movie was "the best of the year." Early reviews were stellar - 98% favorable at one point on Rotten Tomatoes. The trailers were awesome. The Forum was pretty jazzed about its prospects. My boys and I were too.

Then my boys and I sat together in a fairly crowded theater Saturday night. About thirty minutes into the movie, I had this startling thought: "This isn't very good so far." That was a surprising let down.



I had much the same thought about the same time. I remembered thinking that the whole vignette with the soldiers taking refuge in the derelict trawler was overdone, overwraught and a waste of time. Particularly on top of the other ships that they had been evicted from and / or had sunk under them. Combined with the somewhat 'tinny' Stuka special effects early on, I began to have my doubts which continued through the movie.

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Post #: 206
RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/28/2017 3:33:14 PM   
Chickenboy


Posts: 24520
Joined: 6/29/2002
From: San Antonio, TX
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1
Were there things I would have liked to see? Yes of course, but I am not going to judge the film on what it could have been, I'm going to judge it on what I saw.


With all due respect, I disagree with this approach to movie going.

You paid your monies. You got your ducket. You (the filmgoer) are absolutely entitled to judge the film based upon your own rubric or matrix. I frequently judge films (for better or worse) on what they do or do not contain or on what they could have been versus what I saw. I respectfully submit that this point of view is not alien to most filmgoers and, in fact, is quite common.

What I saw of the movie was not bad (for the most part). What was omitted (what "could have been") was critically important to the movie. The departure from the expected was, for me, a serious blow against my enjoyment of the movie.

Edited to correct some subject:verb agreement.

< Message edited by Chickenboy -- 7/28/2017 3:34:07 PM >


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Post #: 207
RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/28/2017 4:23:11 PM   
warspite1


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

ORIGINAL: Chickenboy

quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1
Were there things I would have liked to see? Yes of course, but I am not going to judge the film on what it could have been, I'm going to judge it on what I saw.


With all due respect, I disagree with this approach to movie going.

You paid your monies. You got your ducket. You (the filmgoer) are absolutely entitled to judge the film based upon your own rubric or matrix. I frequently judge films (for better or worse) on what they do or do not contain or on what they could have been versus what I saw. I respectfully submit that this point of view is not alien to most filmgoers and, in fact, is quite common.

What I saw of the movie was not bad (for the most part). What was omitted (what "could have been") was critically important to the movie. The departure from the expected was, for me, a serious blow against my enjoyment of the movie.

Edited to correct some subject:verb agreement.
warspite1

But if you read on you will see that I actually kind of agree with your approach. I had expectations, but nothing definite, about what Dunkirk and Stalingrad would be about based on the title alone.

When it turned out that was not the case (for both), the only reason I didn't leave the cinema short changed after Dunkirk is because I got a great film anyway. That was not the case with Stalingrad and thus I was doubly let down; the film was nothing like I hoped and expected and was actually really quite dull and boring. So the emotions you're expressing are I guess broadly similar to mine when I came out of watching Stalingrad - I focused on the 'what might have been' more than Dunkirk for the simple reason I was so damn disappointed - and probably judged Stalingrad more harshly as a result.

With Dunkirk, I have my own personal wishlist of what I'd ideally like to have seen in a film about this battle, but it ain't gonna happen now so no point worrying about it. There are always things that one could wish happened in a movie to make it even better; Gal Gadot's clothes could have accidentally all fallen off in Wonder Woman for example Fnarr, Fnarr.

Of course Pearl Harbor presented a third way; I was very content coming out of Dunkirk, I was mighty cheesed off coming out of Stalingrad, and I was hospitalised as my brain had died after watching Rafe and Danny's Excellent Adventure...


Rafe: Bogus dude!
Danny: Hey dude, let's see if that nice Irishman Mr Yamm O'Moto wants to come out and play!
Rafe and Danny [together]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7mi4h00fedY



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< Message edited by warspite1 -- 7/29/2017 9:04:14 AM >


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Post #: 208
RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/28/2017 6:36:28 PM   
geofflambert


Posts: 14863
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Quien es Mas Macho? Ben Affleck o Tom Hardy?





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Post #: 209
RE: OT: Dunkirk the Movie! - 7/29/2017 4:06:32 PM   
rustysi


Posts: 7472
Joined: 2/21/2012
From: LI, NY
Status: offline
quote:

I have my own personal wishlist of what I'd ideally like to have seen in a film about this battle, but it ain't gonna happen now so no point worrying about it. There are always things that one could wish happened


Its almost like we're talking about the game.

quote:

and I was hospitalised as my brain had died after watching Rafe and Danny's Excellent Adventure...




_____________________________

It is seldom that liberty of any kind is lost all at once. Hume

In every party there is one member who by his all-too-devout pronouncement of the party principles provokes the others to apostasy. Nietzsche

Cave ab homine unius libri. Ltn Prvb

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