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Reel Reviews: War from both sides of the desk

We say, 鈥淔orgive these films their faults and they will be entertaining enough.鈥

Darkest Hour is the tale of Winston Churchill鈥檚 (Gary Oldman) stirring turn as England鈥檚 Prime Minister during the Second World War. 12 Strong is the tale of a small unit of American soldiers, dropped into Afghanistan in October of 2001. Led by a rookie Captain (Chris Hemsworth) they team up with a local warlord to pinpoint Taliban locations for incoming air strikes.

We say, 鈥淔orgive these films their faults and they will be entertaining enough.鈥

Darkest Hour is the better of these two films artistically.

Taking place in the 1940s makes it a bit of a period piece and production value is added in the process of setting and costuming. As such, the film invites us to believe that we are privy into the lives of the characters, in particular that of Churchill. Looking and sounding like we are in the right place at the right time is key to a film鈥檚 ability to engross and Darkest Hour succeeds in this endeavour.

So to is it successful in it鈥檚 portrayal of it鈥檚 characters, at least in terms of the actors chosen and their performances. Everyone is fine and as usual, Oldman is amazing, disappearing into makeup and performance, becoming Churchill, an aged but energetic man.

A good part of Oldman鈥檚 portrayal leads us into an understanding of his character: he鈥檚 funny, brash yet sympathetic, he鈥檚 got a lot of energy and puts in a great deal of work, despite smoking and drinking way too much. Oldman鈥檚 Churchill is a man running on fumes, desperate to save his country from Hitler. Oldman is usually amazing and one of the best actors alive, it鈥檚 not surprising that he鈥檚 getting accolades for his work in this film.

However, the film itself is held back by the telling of the story. Perhaps it is due to the tidiness required to wrap up such a combination of character study and political epic within nearly two hours, but the film is often too simplified.

Darkest Hour tells a story of placation and surrender, only Churchill wants to fight, everyone else in the story, from the King to the parliament, can come up with no solution beyond sitting down at Hitler鈥檚 table to work out some kind of deal. I鈥檓 not sure if this is the history of the event, I certainly wouldn鈥檛 be surprised if it turned out to be accurate, but as an audience member, it just made Churchill seem like the only brave politician in a sea of cowards, which didn鈥檛 help suspend my disbelief.

12 Strong, as an American film about American soldiers, was something I dreaded watching. These things tend to be propagandist at the least and sickeningly so when done poorly.

However, 12 Strong did not annoy me or bore me, except for a small battle portion of the film near the end where everyone was running around shooting at each other, just like they do in every other movie about killing.

In this film are several fine actors, including Michael Shannon in perhaps his most accessible, human role as a commanding officer. All of the characters are already experienced soldiers by Sept. 11, 2001 and the next day are champing at the bit to retaliate.

This feels realistic and the film doesn鈥檛 play up everyone鈥檚 feelings on the matter, with stirring music and flapping flags. Once they get to Afghanistan, which doesn鈥檛 take long, either in real life or the film, 12 Strong becomes quite like war films of old, with men charging at each other on horse back and occasionally calling in bomb strikes. Horses, used to travel the Afghanistan mountains, adds to this romantic notion of war and makes things more cinematic, but is merely window dressing for what ultimately is a film about death from above brought about by hooves on the ground.

The worst thing about this film is its depiction of the Taliban as enemy. There is one awful scene to summarize why they are the enemy that is supposed to also justify the operation and perhaps it does, I just didn鈥檛 need to see it. Without this scene the enemy would have remained blips on a screen and 12 Strong would have seemed stronger, certainly more American.

Taylor gives Darkest Hour 4 cigars out of 5 and 12 Strong 2.5 laser pointers out of 5.

鈥 Brian Taylor and Peter Howe are film reviewers based in Vernon. Their column, Reel Reviews, appears every Friday.



newstips@vernonmorningstar.com

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10602235_web1_180216-VMS-PC-DarkestHour
Gary Oldman chomps a mean cigar in the Darkest Hour. (Universal Studios image)
10602235_web1_180216-VMS-PC-12strong
Chris Hemsworth rides a mean horse in 12 Strong. (Warner Bros. image)


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