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1917 film review: War has never been captured so incredibly, Ars Technica

1917 film review: War has never been captured so incredibly, Ars Technica


    

      Spiders? Nope, rats –

             

A few liberties taken with WWI’s events, but they’re very, very worth it.

      

      

  • stands perilously on the edge of relevance to Ars Technica. Anyone who reads our coverage of military tech and the history of war might be surprised to read that, given howrevolves around the German occupation of northern France during World War I.Even so,

  • makes our list because its “one unbroken shot” gimmick is a technological achievement, and it unlocks Mendes’ ability to tell a different kind of WWI story than we’ve ever seen in theaters.Alberich with a twist      
                       

                                  **************                                                            Lance Corporals Schofield (George MacKay) and Blake (Dean-Charles Chapman) have just gotten their orders.                                                                                           **********************                              

                                  ******************                                                            Those orders lead the duo to, among other things, a perilous plane crash.                                                        **************************                                              Universal Pictures                                  **********************                  

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                                  ********************                                                            Blinded by the light? No, by the dust.                                                        **************************                                              Universal Pictures                                  **********************                               

                                  

  •                                                             Blake tells a tale about a fellow soldier’s ear.                                                        **************************                                              Universal Pictures                                  **********************                               
                                   (********************************                                                            Schofield better hurry to catch that train. (Kidding. There’s no train at the end of his mad dash. Just, uh, survival.)                                  **********************                  

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                                   (********************************                                                            Schofield and Blake advance.                                                        **************************                                              Universal Pictures                                  **********************                               

                                   (********************************                                                            Orders, Cap’n?                                                        **************************                                              Universal Pictures                                  **********************                               

                                                                                              Always look both ways before crossing.                                                        **************************                                              Universal Pictures                                  **********************                               

                                  

  • **********                                                             Danger may or may not wait within.                                                        **************************                                              Universal Pictures                                  **********************                  
                
                                  

  •                                                             A haunting moment.                                                        **************************                                              Universal Pictures                                  **********************                  
                
                                  

  •                                                             Any Germans this-a-ways?                                                        **************************                                              Universal Pictures                                  **********************                  
                
                                  

  •                                                             Likely not a friendly.                                                        **************************                                              Universal Pictures                                  **********************              
  •   The film’s first scene revolves around two British soldiers receiving orders to march through supposedly occupied German territory and deliver a message to a nearby regiment. In the film, the Brits think the Germans are retreating to a specific point, the Hindenburg Line, and have thus sent a regiment to strike. In real-life history, this is exactly what the Germans did, and this defensive maneuver is known as Operation Alberich.The tension begins with Lance Corporals Blake and Schofield (Dean-Charles Chapman, George MacKay) following orders to crawl and march through open fields, despite pretty much everyone telling them not to. Germans shot at us two days ago, the duo is told. Mendes and his crew have already established the “unbroken camera shot” gimmick at this point, as the young men march through the trench against the flow of other soldiers to reach a point where they can scale the trench and move ahead. Even before reaching open ground, we see events through a cleverly situated camera hovering far enough from the duo to place bumping, colliding soldiers at the camera’s “lens” without breaking the dolly’s slowly moving momentum.But it’s when the duo scales the walls that the scale of this no-cuts camerawork becomes apparent. A first-time viewer will likely shudder and clench their armrests thanks to the dramatic tension of wondering whether our guys will indeed be attacked by hidden Germans. But the stuff that had my jaw dropping was how the camera crew hovered and floated around the adventuring duo without betraying their filmmaking presence. No shadows from cameras, boom mics, or other gear. No fresh filmmakers’ boots in the nearby mud. No disturbance of the horrors of war that have been scattered around the film’s battlefield (which range from dead horses, to much, much worse).It’s one thing to compliment Chapman and MacKay’s efforts in these unbroken shots. The film reimagines the old phrase “theater of war,” as the actors must complete strenuous and agonizing sequences without breaking to remember dialogue or change positions between diving, crawling, marching, and climbing. But it’s a whole ‘nother to watch Mendes and crew dance around the leads. At one moment, the camera is disturbingly tight on one actor’s anguish or horror; Within seconds, it has spun to reveal the other actor’s movement and staging while highlighting how much ground the British soldiers must cover to succeed.