Film Review
The release of
Westfront 1918, the first sound film to be directed
by G.W. Pabst, was almost coincident with that of another significant anti-war
film set during the First World War, Lewis Milestone's
All Quiet on the
Western Front (1930).
Whilst it was massively overshadowed
by Milestone's Oscar winning film,
Westfront 1918 conveys far more
authentically the horror and misery of war and is far more effective in getting
across its pacifist message - so effective indeed that it was immediately
banned by the Nazis once they had come to power a few years after its release
in 1930. The film is a faithful adaptation of Ernst Johannsen's novel
Vier von der Infanterie and is quite possibly the finest of Pabst's
sound films, noted for its pioneering use of sound which adds greatly to
the film's biting realism.
The film takes place in France in the last year of WWI. On the
German side of the western front, four infantrymen
are having a hard time in the trenches as the seemingly endless war drags
on. They are Karl, the Bavarian, the Lieutenant and the Student.
After almost being buried alive when part of their trench collapses, three
of the four are rescued by their comrade, before coming under fire from their
own side owing to an error in setting the range of fire. On leave,
Karl returns to his hometown to find his wife in bed with the butcher.
She protests she was driven to this by virtual starvation - food in the town
is severely rationed - but he can hardly bring himself to forgive her.
Disillusioned both in love and life, Karl returns to the front a bitter man. Meanwhile, the Student has
been killed in the hostilities - all that is visible of him is a hand sticking
out of the mud. Then comes the next big offensive. As the French
army surges forward, the German infantry puts up a fierce defence, but casualties
are high. The Lieutenant completely loses his mind, whilst Karl and
the Bavarian are badly wounded and end up being transported to a makeshift
hospital filled with mutilated and dying men. Who is to blame for all
this? As he surrenders to death, Karl sees the answer: 'We are all
to blame.'
Here, Pabst applies the New Objectivity approach of his late silent films
to devastating effect, with the result that
Westfront 1918 feels much
closer to documentary than drama. There are some striking shots where
the camera follows the action down the line of the trenches but what are
more impactful are the long takes (some as long as a few minutes) where the
camera is rigidly fixed and action moves in and out of the frame. It
is these long static shots that bring home the insane brutality of trench
warfare - as you watch, you can't help feeling like a helpless spectator
trapped in the nightmarish vista that is No Man's Land. It is this
sense of helplessness that pervades the film, and the abject futility of
war has never been more powerfully expressed - either in film or literature
- than it is here. 'Why don't you make peace out there?' the wife of
one of the soldiers asks of her husband. There is no answer - war has
become an accepted fact of life, and most people have long ceased trying
to understand what it is for.
The devastation of the war is brought home to us by the impression it makes
on four ordinary young men, all of whom will, in one way or another, be destroyed
by the conflict, along with countless others. In sharp contrast with
Milestone's film, there is no attempt to make a dramatic or moral point -
these are just four arbitrarily selected men who are put through the ordeal
of trench warfare and cope as best they can before death or disablement carry
them away. Through their eyes and ears not only do we find ourselves
thrust up against the horrific carnage of war and feel its frightening ferocity,
we also appreciate its terrible monotony, the hours of waiting in a nerve-straining
limbo of anticipation - and how intensely do we feel the soldiers' gratitude
for the few hours of relief they enjoy when they are away from the trenches.
Pabst not only shows us the physical damage of war, he also reveals its emotional
and psychological consequences. In one of the most shocking scenes,
one protagonist completely loses his mind and is reduced a raving lunatic
- for him at least the war is over. Then there is the impact of the
war on the civilian population - something that tends to get overlooked in
films of this kind. On the brink of starvation, the wife of an infantryman
is driven to sleep with a butcher. Characteristically, Pabst does not
condemn the woman, rather he compels us to sympathise with her. She
is just one of the millions upon millions of unseen victims of the war, coping
with her own war far from the bullets and bayonets - the war to survive when
there is so little to live for. Made at a time when the German economy
was in spectacular freefall, the plight of this unfortunate woman would have
struck an immediate chord. It may have been twelve years since the
war ended, but for most of the population of Germany its aftershocks were
still being felt.
In the very last shot of
Westfront 1918, a wounded French solider
takes the hand of a dead German infantryman and deliriously insists he is
his comrade, not his enemy. It is a poignant symbol of solidarity that
prefigures Pabst's subsequent film
Kameradschaft
(1931). In the final caption the word
Ende is followed by a
question mark and an exclamation mark. Of course this was not The End.
After a brief lull, the fighting and the misery would continue, with renewed
vigour, and the idea that man might learn something from the First World
War and become so revolted by the idea of war that it could never recur
proved to be mere delusion.
If the hellish spectacle of pain and destruction presented so convincingly
by Pabst and Milestone could not tame man's instinct for mass slaughter and
self-induced torment nothing could. Are there any crumbs of comfort
to be found in the final words of
Westfront 1918 - 'Moi, comarade.
Pas ennemi, pas ennemi...'?
© James Travers 2016
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