• _Women at War_; _All Quiet on the Western Front_; _The Woman King_

    From septimus_millenicom@q.com@21:1/5 to All on Sun Feb 26 15:51:20 2023
    The Tech people I talk to all seem to think that the a nation's population
    is useful for "innovation." They are so deluded. Human capital has
    always been about three things: tax revenue, consumption, and cannon
    fodder (even in this age of drones and AI).

    Streaming _Women at War_, a piece of fluff about WWI on the Western front,
    I felt obliged to watch the brutal _All Quiet on the Western Front_, also
    on Netflix. And then there is the mother of all cartoonish comics, _The
    Woman King_. All give different perspectives on the Ukraine war, which
    is said to resemble static WWI trench warfare in a world order that also increasingly resembles the pre-WWI configuration.

    Collectively, they remind me that Terrence Malick's _The Thin Red Line_
    is the greatest war film of all time. It has only grown in stature and
    power in the last quarter century. Not only is it visceral and poetic;
    the many philosophical debates among the characters make this by far
    the most complete cinematic treatise on war. The relevant element
    here is the idea that commanders are parent-figures, which is such a
    lie because they send their troops out to die, get maimed, or imprisoned
    by enemies. Captain Staros does his best to protect his company C, but
    that also makes him an ineffective leader. Colonel Tall is vainglorious
    and ruthless, but his tactics break the Japanese line, albeit at immense
    cost. And then there is George Clooney's general who likens himself
    to the infantrymen's father. Clooney is so smarmy you want to punch
    him just as a matter of general principle, but here he surpasses himself
    in the slimball department. But there is a war to be won. The second
    worst thing we can do is to fight a war. Unfortunately, the worst thing happens to be to lose a war. We are stuck with characters like these.
    (But there are also the Jim Caviezel and Sean Penn characters, the
    true heroes.)

    The stars in _Women at War_ are prostitutes-turned-ambulance drivers,
    factory owners, a doctor on the run, and a nun caring for mutilated
    French soldiers. There is plenty of romance, a mother looking for
    long-lost son who has become an officer, a general sending his son
    to die. This is a theme covered far more deeply (if metaphorically)
    in TTRL of course. The battle and hospital scenes are quite gruesome
    and does justice to the war (although there is no trench warfare).
    The highlights of this soapy melodrama are Florence Loiret-Caille,
    who has a minor role as the villainous brothel co-owner, and Audrey
    Fleurot as the prostitute. Fleurot is clearly the biggest TV star
    here (eclipsing Sandrine Bonnaire), and her range is impressive.
    With her stark red hair and deep green eyes, you wonder why she
    hasn't been cast as a space alien, or Bond lady.

    The 2022 version of _All Quiet on the Western Front_ plays up the
    absurdity of war and the villainy of those who exploited nationalism
    to rile up young men and enlisted them for senseless warfare. All
    perfectly valid points, but it omits the sheer necessity of repelling
    invaders. (Although this German film is shot from the Germans '
    perspective and they were the invaders.) WWI belonged to that
    technological glitch of an era where offense is stymied by defense
    (the opposite of WWII). The suffering of those stuck in water- and rat-infested trenches, haunted by artillery barrage, was uniquely
    inhuman (not that the sufferings in any other era were better, just
    different). There were also deaths by gas attacks, flame-throwers,
    bayonet, artillery strike, and the old favorite -- the ubiquitous
    machine gun mowing down soldiers in no-man's-land variety. It
    is the antidote in an era where so much of cinema (especially
    that from the People's Republic of China) glorifies war. But
    the deadliest adversary to our protagonist turns out to be an
    catatonic 10-year-old. In a senseless attack on the eve of
    the Armistice which ends up in a giant water-filled crater,
    he rediscovers his humanity. A few French Saint-Chamond tanks
    make an appearance; these slow moving land leviathans with 75mm
    guns that can hurl high explosive shells are particularly deadly
    to the Germans, and have never been in movies before. They point
    the way to the coming slaughter where armor reigned.

    Sometimes a single scene in a director's ouvre eloquently
    disqualifies him/her from being considered a legitimate auteur.
    In Gina Prince-Bythewood's case it would be the scene in _The
    Woman King_ where a woman soldier sticks her fingers into her
    enemy's eyes, killing him. Most of that is suggested (the film
    is PG-13), but the shot is unmistakably played for exciting,
    glorious, revenge-fueled action. It normalizes the most horrific
    aspects of war. Prince-Bythewood should watch _All Quiet_ 10
    times in a row to atone for her sins.

    At least the "king" aspects of Viola Davis' character turns
    out to be a honorific, and is not brought up until the very
    end. But the young heroine being the old heroine's daughter
    trope is pure Marvel Comics (and _Star Wars_ and countless
    pop culture corn). Suggested punishment -- watch _The Thin
    Red Line_ 10 times and see how that theme should have been
    handled.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)