Film Review
Capitaine Conan is one war
film that everyone should be compelled to watch. With its
unapologetically graphic portrayal of the horrors and injustices of
war, it does not make for the most comfortable of viewing experiences,
but what makes it invaluable is its uncompromising insights into the
less visible harm of warfare - its impact on the psychology of those
who participate in it. The film is based on a novel of the same
title by Roger Vercel which was controversial in its time but received
France's highest literary award, the Prix Goncourt, in 1934.
Drawing on his own stark memories as a stretcher-bearer in WWI, Vercel
takes us beyond the merely physical devastation wrought by warfare and
exposes something just as horrific, the extent to which the human
psyche can be totally and irreversibly warped by the experience of
armed combat, and the moral implications that then arise. In his
film adaptation, Bertrand Tavernier drives home the central message of
Vercel's novel with extraordinary eloquence and power. Having
transformed its citizens into conscienceless killers to fight its wars,
a nation has a moral duty not only re-civilise its warriors once the
hostilities have ended but also to take responsibility for those acts
of atrocity carried out by battle-hardened soldiers in their 'moments
of madness'. As recent events have shown in the war in
Afghanistan, Vercel's novel and Tavernier's film still have a
resonance, and a lesson to teach us all.
Capitaine Conan continues and
extends the carefully reasoned anti-war sentiment that Tavernier
expressed so pointedly in his previous films
La Vie et rien d'autre (1989)
and
La Guerre sans nom
(1992). It is not the physical damage of war that appears to
offend Tavernier most, but rather the hypocrisy, the injustice and the
less visible consequences of war that can be just as destructive.
Capitaine Conan begins with one
of the most viscerally shocking sequences of any war film, action
scenes that look more like something out of the Middle Ages than the
20th century. There is nothing heroic in Tavernier's depiction of
war. It is merely ugly, senseless carnage, waged by things that
are scarcely recognisable as human beings as they slice each other up
in the heat of battle. When this spectacle of gore and ferocity
is abruptly curtailed it is quite a shock and, bizarrely, we find
ourselves on the side of the trigger-happy killers and cut-throats who
are at a loose end once the fighting is suspended, psychotic killing
machines waiting to re-programmed.
The sense of injustice which Vercel conveys so powerfully in his novel
is palpably rendered in the film's languorous middle section.
Within a matter of days of being feted as a hero of the Republic, Conan
soon finds himself being treated by French military justice as a
dangerous criminal. The only person who appears capable of seeing
things from his perspective is a sensitive young academic, Norbert; to
the rule-bound establishment, he is an embarrassment and a threat to be
eliminated. Conan in fact comes to symbolise the fundamental
injustice of war, the man-turned-warrior who, once he has done his job,
is no longer fit for purpose in any civilised society. When we
see what Conan becomes at the end of the film, a vague shadow of his
former self, the revulsion we feel is almost unbearable. If the
soldier had been hacked to pieces amid the frenzy of battle, that would
have been more tolerable, a far more fitting end. To see him
reduced to a dry husk of a man, his purpose and vitality completely
extinguished, that is a far greater tragedy.
Thanks to its intelligent screenplay, compelling performances from a
top notch cast and some superb handheld camerawork
Capitaine Conan is a cinematic tour
de force that stands as one of the high points of 1990s French
cinema. The film was nominated for nine Césars in 1997,
winning awards for Best Actor (Philippe Torreton) and Best Director
(Bertrand Tavernier). So intensely gripping and moving is
Torreton's portrayal of the complex, fractured central character Conan
that it is too easy to overlook the remarkable contributions from the
other great actors around him, including Samuel Le Bihan, Bernard Le
Coq, François Berléand and Claude Rich. Tavernier's
direction is as masterful as ever, although it is in the battle
sequences that he impresses most. With the help of his talented
cinematographer Alain Choquart he creates a truly horrifying spectacle
of carnage, scenes of mayhem that are awash with blood, adrenalin and
vivid human suffering.
Capitaine
Conan is a film that will leave an indelible impression on
anyone who watches it; you are left not only feeling nauseous for war
but also profoundly shaken by its hidden consequences. In
assessing the true cost of war, it is not just the broken bodies on the
battlefield that we have to count, but also the minds of the survivors
that have been damaged beyond repair.
© James Travers 2014
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Next Bertrand Tavernier film:
Ça commence aujourd'hui (1999)
Film Synopsis
In the final months of World War I, the French infantry are actively
engaged in mopping up the enemy trenches on the Macedonian Front.
Captain Conan leads a special squad of hardened troops recruited
from military prisons, winning praise from his superiors for the zeal
with which he carries out his orders. But Conan despises the
military hierarchy and only has time for two of his fellow officers,
the nobleman De Scève and former academic Norbert. Once an
armistice with Bulgaria is signed in September 1918, Conan and his men
are sent to Bucharest, to await orders to fight against the Red Army in
the Russian Civil War. With nothing to do, Conan's men soon
become demoralised and discipline breaks down. Some of the men
become bandits and carry out an armed raid on a nightclub.
Military justice is swift to act and Norbert is coerced into defending
Conan and his rogue soldiers. Conan's war is far from over...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.