No, this won’t do, said I to myself. An American officer in John
Dahl’s new movie, The Great Raid, had been given the
tremendously dangerous and daring mission of rescuing several
hundred other Americans from a hellish Japanese prisoner-of-war
camp. Now he was rejecting a particular tactical suggestion by
saying, “I can’t guarantee the safety of the prisoners.” Guarantee
their safety? It would have been far more plausible for him to
speak of guaranteeing their murder — as the film itself clearly
shows in a horrific scene of another group of American prisoners
whom the Japanese had herded into a bomb shelter and set on fire.
The phrase was clearly just a momentary anachronism, a lapse into
the vocabulary of our own risk-averse era — as if it were possible
ever to guarantee anyone’s safety — and out of the characteristic
idioms of 1945 when the real life events on which the movie is
based took place. It was like hearing World War II era people
talking of “hooking up” — which they also do here.
But sloppiness about getting the dialogue right often betokens
other problems with a movie, and that proves to be the case here.
There is even something not quite right about Benjamin Bratt’s
Colonel Mucci, the leader of the rescue mission. He has the
ruggedly handsome look of an ideal American Ranger and all the
accessories — the pipe, the pencil-thin moustache (which he has to
shave lest he advertise himself as an officer), the non-regulation
cap of the irregular jungle fighter — but they are too firmly in
place. He is, in short, too perfect. He looks not like a Colonel of
Rangers but like a male model dressed up as one. He lacks the
untidiness of authenticity. So does the raid itself. According to
the publicity, the film is an account of “the greatest rescue
mission ever attempted,” but even if we allow for Hollywood
hyperbole, the film doesn’t deliver. The greatest rescue mission
ever attempted looks just a bit too much like a walk in the park.
Nothing goes seriously wrong. Nobody gets very dirty or bloody.
Only a couple of the good guys — though naturally all of the
Japanese — are killed.
It’s possible that what looks like a prettying up of the
nastiness of war was deliberate, and at times The Great
Raid seems to aspire to the unworldliness of epic poetry,
where the heroes, just because they are portrayed as being larger
than life, are allowed to stand around making noble and inspiring
speeches. “How you acquit yourselves over the next 48 hours will
determine how you are regarded for the rest of your lives,” says
the Colonel to his men in an absolutely classic appeal to the
warrior’s lust for fame and renown.
“I don’t suppose many of us are in this for the glory,” says
someone to him, half in reproach.
“I’m not talking about publicity,” explains the Colonel, “but
something you carry inside you.” That’s why “nothing in our lives
will ever be as important.”
This is an admirable dissertation on honor — which, of course,
is not mentioned as such — but to my ear it strikes a false note.
That kind of epic sentiment, even reduced to a sentence of
colloquial speech, is almost always a mistake in so realistic a
medium as the movies. Ronald F. Maxwell tried it in
Gettysburg (1993) and then again in Gods and
Generals (2003) but neither time was he able to produce
anything much more than a laughably wooden-looking series of
tableaux vivants. I felt sorry for Maxwell, as I feel
sorry for Dahl, because the impulse behind their artificial style
of filmmaking is a laudable one, namely an exaggerated respect for
the heroism of real life soldiers to whom all respect is due. But
what is perfectly acceptable in history — or in epic poetry — is
much harder to make work on the big screen. Maybe Abel Gance’s
Napoleon (1927) managed it, but it helped a lot that that
was conceived as a silent film.
THERE ARE OTHER PROBLEMS with The Great Raid. It aspires
not only to epic stature but also to epic sweep, though at 132
minutes it is both too long and not long enough to achieve the
epic’s leisureliness and sense of familiarity with its characters.
Once the rescue operation starts, the action is rather hard to
follow, partly because of the usual fog of movie-war but also
because the characters are too undifferentiated. Moreover, the
story of the sundered lovers, the prisoners’ leader Major Gibson
(Joseph Fiennes) and Margaret Utinsky (Connie Nielsen), the widow
of Gibson’s former commanding officer, seems surplus to
requirements. Margaret herself is a leader of the anti-Japanese
underground in Manila, and the idea of including her exploits there
is partly to add a third, intertwined narrative to that of the
American prisoners’ attempt to forestall their execution by the
Japanese and that of the Ranger company trying to rescue them. But
it’s all too much. Her part in the “great raid” itself is obscure
and unnecessary and her scenes badly slow down the pace of the
dramatic rescue.
Of course, Margaret also symbolizes the distant and perhaps
unattainable prospect of civilian life and domestic happiness to a
man who would otherwise have forgotten what these things were like.
But here too the Margaret-in-Manila scenes come across rather as a
distraction than as a contribution to the film’s broader themes. We
hardly need to be told that the prisoners would much rather have
been back in civilian life and close to their loved ones.
I hope I’m not being too hard on the movie. It’s one of those
that it pains me not to like. For I approve of its point of view
and would like to be able to approve of its methods. I strongly
believe in the good intentions behind its celebration of an act of
heroism that should not be forgotten. But with the best will in the
world, I just didn’t find it a particularly compelling
two-hours-plus at the movies.