โ€œGentlemen, you canโ€™t fight in here. This is the war room.โ€

What is a war? Is it an extremely lengthy melodrama like the never ending long shots of โ€œ1917โ€? Or is it a Kafkaesque confusion that keeps on changing aspects like the regularly changing aspect ratios of โ€œDunkirkโ€? Or can it be just heartless monotonous suffering like that of โ€œGreenery Will Bloom Againโ€? While Renoir feels it to be a great grand illusion of meaningless existence and goes on to compare the proceedings with a theatre, Kubrick portrays it as a family of paradoxes. And while talking about paradoxes about war, I personally canโ€™t help but think about a statement from my homeland, one in which Mrinal Sen, in his film โ€œChorusโ€ mocks, โ€œWar is not a game of cricket that everything will go by the rulesโ€ (observe the analogy between this and โ€œThis is nothing about law and order. This is a goddamn war.โ€ from โ€œThe Thin Red Lineโ€).




While Spielberg compares the war with a walk on the grave and goes on to sprinkle his celluloid with drops of blood to wash his frames with the roaring cacophony of it, Ford Coppola gets a step ahead to compare it with an apocalypse. What can, if not โ€œthe horrorโ€ of an apocalypse, force a sane human being to โ€œlearn to stop worrying and love the bombโ€, and say things like โ€œWe are not here to do the decent things. We are here to follow the fucking ordersโ€.

Related Read to War Films: Paths of Glory [1957]: An Anti-War Anthem

And this horror, which Bergman paints symbolically through playing a game of chess with death, is captured hilariously by the satirical Chaplin through a simple scene in which a hand grenade, ready to explode, slips into the userโ€™s shirt and he struggles to free himself from the deadly trap. It is the same horror that Tarkovsky communicates to us through a scene in which one of the kids who are being trained in an army camp, throws a fake grenade and silently watches how others are terrified by it. Nolan portrays this horror through a frame in which a series of blasts miss our protagonist by an inch. Even Kurosawa, who glorified Samurai battles in his previous films, goes on to say, โ€œIt is the gods who weep. They see us killing each other over and over since time began. They canโ€™t save us from ourselvesโ€. While the poet in Malick decides upon using a disturbing symbol like a suffering hatchling, others like Peter Jackson, David Zeiger, George Butler, Sammy Jackson and many more takes another step towards reality by deciding upon the medium of a documentary.




And what about the horror of expecting a war? While Satyajit Ray and Mrinal Sen make extremely successful attempts in the vivid depiction of the fear of an approaching war over a society, Bergman resorts to creating a character who commits suicide to get rid of his bad dreams of a nuclear war. โ€œDr. Strangeloveโ€ creates a doomsday machine which can destroy the whole world once it is ignited. The protagonist of โ€œA Hidden Lifeโ€, on the other hand, hopes that god would listen to his prayers and allow him to stay with his family. He runs to the church to ask the bishop whether his prayers will be answered only to be informed that the church bells are about to be melted to make bullets.

War

One of the recurring themes of almost all anti-war films seems to be the romantic tomfoolery of the ignorant common men that the war uses as jewelry. In โ€œHacksaw Ridgeโ€, an ex-army officer who repents the loss of his dear friends and regularly visits the grave in their memory says, โ€œEverybody jumps in and does things quick, without thinking! Like the damn idiot fools we wereโ€. In โ€œAll Quiet on the Western Frontโ€, a schoolmaster spits his patriotic poison out to send small school children to the war, and when one of them returns on a leave after losing all his friends and tells his juniors how wretched the war is, he is accused of being a coward by them. โ€œJojo Rabbitโ€ is the journey of a young boy, hypnotized by Hitlerโ€™s ideologies, slowly recognizing the nature of the suppression as well as the suppressor only to finally understand that the war benefits none.




โ€œBorn on the Fourth of Julyโ€ is introduced to us through a scene in which small boys play with toy guns and think that thatโ€™s how, they can become a man. When these kids become middle aged boys, the marines come to their school to introduce themselves. This introduction is nothing but the typical capitalist advertisement in the name of patriotism (this reminds me of colonel Dax in โ€œPaths of Gloryโ€ repeating Samuel Jacksonโ€™s words, โ€œpatriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel.โ€). Midway in this film, the protagonist realizes that they have been fooled into believing that Communism is the source of all evil and in name of stopping it, they have just killed innocent women and children.

Related Read to War Films: The Ascent [1977]: An Unheard Anti-War Masterpiece

Another repeating idea that I appreciate a lot is portraying the contrast between the peaceful approach of art and the violent approach of the war. The genius of Kubrick concludes an hour and a halfโ€™s tragedy with a melody that a German girl hums into English ears. In Ermanno Olmiโ€™s film, a wretched captain commands a sergeant to sing the worst times out. In โ€œLetters From Iwo Jimaโ€, the army general makes sketches of his memorable moments in his free time. One navy officer in โ€œDas Bootโ€ loves clicking photographs to make memories and another takes pride in his personal collection of music. In โ€œSaving Private Ryanโ€, soldiers listen to music before they march on. And โ€œHairโ€ makes an extremity of it by making a musical out of a war film.




The obvious theme of the heartlessness of a war of course gets the greatest importance in every film. In โ€œPaths of Gloryโ€, three innocent soldiers are punished for just trying to stay alive, thus asking whether duty comes before self-preservation. They clearly become a victim of a seniorโ€™s ego. โ€œHiroshima Mon Amourโ€ glides through the destruction that Hiroshima had to suffer for the war. In โ€œPlatoonโ€, American soldiers march into a village in Vietnam where they mercilessly destroy the crops and the domestic animals without any reason. The film proceeds to show one of the soldiers killing an innocent villager just because he didnโ€™t like his face. A few minutes later, the general orders to shoot a village lady as she questioned their act of destroying the crops. He goes on to attempt killing her little daughter as she was crying for losing her mother. Whatโ€™s more, a few soldiers even attempt to rape a young Vietnamese girl and the one who stops them is tagged a โ€œhomosexualโ€ by the others.

War

In โ€œApocalypse Nowโ€, a lieutenant throws cards on dead bodies of enemy soldiers to count their success. Teddy Daniels in โ€œShutter Islandโ€ silently watches an enemy soldier suffering for his pains and later he and his team mercilessly fire thousands of prisoners. โ€œDr. Strangeloveโ€ walks a step ahead to name an army general after a serial killer. In โ€œCome and Seeโ€, innocent Russian villagers are forcefully locked inside a house which is then set on fire by the German soldiers. The helpless death cry of the locked villagers is overlapped with the sound of the clapping soldiers. These fifteen minutes of the film (and also the rest of it as a matter of fact) is so loyal to the medium of cinema, that I lack words to describe them properly. I would recommend this film to you all.




The masterpiece, โ€œJohnny Got His Gunโ€ further highlights this point by creating a character that has lost both his legs and arms, his vision, his hearing, his teeth and his tongue. He can only feel that he is alive and that people are using him for their experiments. He doesnโ€™t understand whether he exists or not and canโ€™t differentiate between dreams and reality. He has been reduced to absolute nothing but a bunch of memories and daydreams. At the end of the film, he succeeds in communicating his wish of getting killed using Morse code, but is denied the favor since that would disrupt the experiments. A priest is asked to tell him to put his faith in god, to which the priest replies, โ€œI’ll pray for him for the rest of my days, but I will not risk testing his faith against your stupidity. Heโ€™s the product of your profession, not mine.โ€ Maybe, the last word about this inhuman sadism is spoken by โ€œFull Metal Jacketโ€ โ€“ itโ€™s the Jungian duality of man, the film claims.

Related Read to War Films: This Is Not A War Story [2021]: A Devastating Yet Knobbly Look At PTSD

Almost every film portrays how war breaks bonds between loved ones. While in โ€œThe Thin Red Lineโ€, a soldier gets a letter from his beloved wife asking him for a divorce, in โ€œGreenery Will Bloom Againโ€, a trooper recalls returning home to find his wife on bed with someone else. In โ€œThe Deer Huntโ€, best friends, who enlisted together, return to their village only to realize that everything has changed. They no longer feel the same sense of attachment with the villagers which they previously used to. โ€œAmerican Sniperโ€ particularly highlights how the war distances a sniper from his family. The final flashback of โ€œIvanโ€™s Childhoodโ€ is of the young boy (who lost everything including his own self in the war) running across a beach after a girl in happier times and it concludes with a stunning visual of a dead tree on the beach.




In the 1925 silent masterpiece, โ€œThe Big Paradeโ€, an English soldier falls in love with a French girl and when the war breaks out, circumstances decide upon separating them. We have a scene where the soldier, before leaving the town, madly searches for his lover and vice versa. Each one of them is unable to reach out for the other in the crowd. And when they finally meet, they hardly have time to talk. The girl starts running after the car that takes her lover away. It is the same run that โ€œA Hidden Lifeโ€ paints when the protagonist is forced to leave his wife and โ€œCome and Seeโ€ portrays when the boy leaves his mother. All of them run as far as they can, but they all are finally overtaken by the pace of the system.

Hacksaw Ridge

Another idea that I really adore is the illustration of how the system of a war crushes the individuality of man- this is often done through small yet significant bits of information like a general saying that they are ready to waste (yeah, thatโ€™s the word they use) half of the battalion for just a piece of land that they need. Ritwik Ghatakโ€™s idea of making a film about Vietnam, as he writes, goes, โ€œA young boy struck by a bullet. We donโ€™t know who he is; he may be a student or a farmer.โ€. โ€œPersonal ambition must be thrown asideโ€, yells the schoolmaster in โ€œAll Quiet on the Western Frontโ€. After the radio announces the death of 115 men in a war, Anna Karinaโ€™s monologue in Godardโ€™s โ€œPierrot Le Fouโ€ says โ€œIt’s so anonymous. They say โ€œ115 guerrillasโ€, and it means nothing to us. But each one is a man, and we don’t even know who he is, if he loves a woman, if he has kids, if he prefers movies or plays. We know nothing except that they are killed.โ€




Other subtle similarities in ideas and cinematography often surprise me. In โ€œIvanโ€™s Childhoodโ€, โ€œGreenery Will Bloom Againโ€, โ€œThe Big Paradeโ€ and โ€œCome and Seeโ€, whizzing rockets look like falling stars. Almost all films use disturbing visuals to show how wretched the war is- one of the repeatedly used images being a hand stuck on a barbed wire. But the one that was of greatest interest to me is the delineation of a sense of miscommunication. Almost all films have a scene in which enemy soldiers fail to communicate and thus end up killing each other. โ€œFear and Desireโ€ has a fabulously disturbing scene in which a soldier tries to communicate with a foreign girl. However, โ€œThe Grand Illusionโ€ paints it in a unique way. A French soldier falls in love with a German lady. He canโ€™t understand German in general, but easily gets when the woman speaks to him with love or asks whether he is hungry- the words of love and hunger are universal, they donโ€™t obey our linguistic boundary. And โ€œJohnny Got His Gunโ€ is clearly a tale of a struggle for communication. Maybe, thatโ€™s what a war is a big fat bug of miscommunication in the history of mankind.

Related Read: The Commissar [1967] : A Startlingly Envisioned Drama About The Cruelties Of War

P.S. Two things must be made clear. First, this article is not one on anti-war cinema. Some of the films mentioned here are clearly not anti-war films, quite a few of the others are often debated whether they are really anti-war or not, and going by Truffautโ€™s words, โ€œThere is no such thing as anti-war filmโ€. According to me, this article is a comparative study of the anti-war message that different films give in their own way. Second, of course, this article does not enlist all anti-war films that released till now- it enlists only the small fraction that I have seen. So, feel free to share your own ideas and recommendations as well.

Author: Sayan Dutta

Links To War Films: IMDb, Wikipedia

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