Film Review
A lot of things have been said about Steven Spielberg, not all of it
necessarily complimentary, but no one would deny he has played a major
role in shaping the cinema experience over the past three and half
decades. It was after all Spielberg who invented the summer
blockbuster with
Jaws (1975), following this up with a string
of box office triumphs that
included
Close Encounters of the Third Kind
(1977),
Raiders of the Lost Ark
(1981) and
Jurassic Park
(1993). Spielberg has a genius for making films with huge
mainstream appeal, to the extent that he is often dismissed as merely a
commercial filmmaker, interested only in makings films that make
money. But there is another side to Spielberg, which was revealed
in his Holocaust drama
Schindler's
List (1993) and confirmed in
Saving
Private Ryan (1998), the auteur and provocateur who is prepared
to gamble his reputation and his money by tackling difficult and
serious subjects in a controversial but honest manner.
History may judge
Saving Private Ryan
to be Spielberg's most significant film. It is the film which
totally re-defined the war movie genre in the late 1990s and altered
overnight audiences' expectations of what a war movie should be and
what war actually looks like. Prior to this film, cinema
tended to regard war as a fantasy genre, the subject of Boys' Own
adventures in which impeccably well-behaved good guys (usually
English-speaking Caucasians) took on and defeated the archetypal
baddies (most often German soldiers) in a nice clean battle in which
pain and bloodshed were conspicuous by their absence. There were
one or two exceptions - notably Robert Enrico's
The Old Gun (1975) and Sam
Peckinpah's
Cross of Iron (1977) - which
dared to show the true face of war, but these were seldom well-received
by the cinema-going public, who wanted their war films to adhere to the
formula of cosy escapism, with just a hint of historical
verisimilitude.
Saving Private
Ryan changed all that and showed the world how war should be
portrayed on the big screen, not as a facile adventure in which no one
is really hurt, but as a true representation of the unspeakable horror
of war.
Watching the first half-hour of
Saving
Private Ryan is about as comfortable as being repeatedly beaten
on the head by a boxing glove containing a brick. With
uncharacteristic brutality, Spielberg doesn't even prepare his audience
for the ordeal that awaits them. After a brief opening sequence
in a Normandy cemetery, we are suddenly propelled into a scene of
frenzied carnage and confusion and have to endure what is probably the
most harrowing 25 minutes of any film to date. With a
near-documentary realism, the film replays the Normandy beach landing
(or rather, one specific part of it) so convincingly that you can feel
yourself there, shivering in the cold, endlessly showered by bullets,
bullets that rip soundlessly into the flesh of soldiers, soldiers who,
almost paralysed by fear, struggle hopelessly to cross the thin strip of
land that stands between them and a hard-won victory. Shaky handheld camerawork and partially obscured low-angle
shots serve to give the spectator the impression that he himself is
caught up in this insane lottery of death. Never before has the
ferocity of battle been caught so vividly on celluloid. When,
finally, the nightmare is over, you are left stunned and half-sick
by the sudden realisation of what war is really like. War is not
glamorous. It is not a game. It is ugly, viciously,
sickeningly ugly.
Saving
Private Ryan not only condemns war with an unprecedented vigour,
but it also serves to raise our estimation of those who fought and died
in the wars of the past century, making us aware of the true extent of
the debt that we owe them and just why we continue to remember
them.
After such an explosive jaw-dropping opening salvo, what follows is
bound to be something of an anti-climax. This is the principal
weakness of
Saving Private Ryan
- it has difficulty maintaining its momentum and ultimately becomes
pretty indistinguishable from most previous war films. It is the
Omaha beach sequence that elevates it from the status of a merely good
war film to a landmark piece of cinema. Fortunately, the
characters are sufficiently engaging and believable (the acting is far
superior to the screenwriting), and the story sufficiently well-told,
for the film to continue to hold our attention in spite of its
over-ample runtime. Periodically, the film does veer
uncomfortably close to tacky sentimentality (assisted by a truly
irritating score), but for the most part it adheres to its realist
agenda and redeems itself with some thoughtful moments of reflection on
the nature of warfare. The scene in which soldiers struggle
hopelessly to stem the blood flow of another soldier (ironically the
medic of the team) after he has been shot is the film's most poignant
as it shows the sheer helplessness of those who whose job it is to kill
to hold back death. Another inspired moment occurs during the
final cataclysmic battle at the end of the film, where a German soldier
stabs to death an American soldier with something of the intimacy of a
love scene, reminding us again of the chief absurdity of war - men
killing men without any personal enmity. Impressive as the
final action sequence is, it lacks the intense visceral quality of the
film's opening battle scene and instead reverts pretty well to the
classic war movie formula.
For such a groundbreaking piece of cinema, it is perhaps surprising
that
Saving Private Ryan
proved to be such a phenomenal box office success. To date, the
film has grossed almost 500 million dollars (a healthy return on its 70
million dollar budget) and attracted the largest audience of any
American film in 1998. The film was also generally well-received
by the critics but fared less well at the Oscars than it perhaps
merited. Nominated for 11 Academy Awards, the film won in just
five categories: Best Director, Best Cinematography, Best Film Editing,
Best Sound, Best Sound Editing, but (incredibly) lost out to
Shakespeare in Love in the Best
Picture category.
Saving Private Ryan is one of
those few films which demands to be seen by everyone as an essential
part of his or her education. It is a film that shows war not as we like
to imagine it to be, as some great adventure, but as it really is, a
supreme tragedy to be avoided at all costs. The characters we are
invited to identify with are not flawless action heroes but ordinary
men who are prone to the same frailties as anyone. Some find it
hard to contain their fear, some are habitual cowards, some are so
overcome by anger that they blithely commit war crimes without knowing
it. Many of those who die in battle do not die easily, but must
instead endure a vicious onslaught of fear and pain before release
finally comes. A harsh testament to the absurdity and
brutality of war,
Saving Private Ryan
is a film that cannot fail to impact, and impact deeply, on anyone who
watches it. The war movie will never be the same again.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Steven Spielberg film:
The BFG (2016)
Film Synopsis
Visiting the American Cemetery at Colleville-sur-mer, Normandy, France,
an elderly WWII veteran seeks out one particular stone cross and, in
the emotional surge of the moment, relives his wartime
experiences. It is June 6th 1944. At the start of the
Allied Invasion of France, American troops make a perilous landing on
Omaha Beach in Normandy. Many soldiers are instantly cut down by
persistent German artillery. Many more survive this first ordeal
and overwhelm the German infantrymen who are defending this stretch of
coast. Of the many who died on the beach, two were
brothers. A third brother of the same family, the Ryans, also
died at about the same time in another campaign. It is left to
General George Marshall to notify the soldiers' mother of the lost of
her three sons. When he learns that Mrs Ryan has a fourth son,
Private James Francis Ryan, currently assigned to the 506th Parachute
Infantry Regiment, he resolves to recall him from combat duty and send
him home. Unfortunately, the present whereabouts of Private
Ryan are unknown. Parachuted into Normandy at the start of the
Allied offensive, Ryan could be anywhere, and the likelihood is that he
is already dead. Captain John H. Miller, commanding officer
of Charlie Company, 2nd Ranger Battalion, receives orders to find
Private Ryan and bring him home. Having assembled a commando team
that comprises himself, six Rangers and a translator, Miller begins his
assignment by scouring the outskirts of Neuville, a town that had been
decimated by bombing. When the team suffer their first
casualty, they start to question the sense of their mission...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.