Las Vegas Review-Journal

Restoring the battlefiel­d, not the film

- Robert Graboyes

World War I lives today only in the childhood memories of a few centenaria­ns. The rest of us must remember it vicariousl­y. With his recent documentar­y, “They Shall Not Grow Old,” director Peter Jackson makes that possible as never before.

For those of us born in the decade after World War II, that later war was terrifying, exhilarati­ng and endlessly fascinatin­g — partly because of the riveting film footage. In contrast, New York Times columnist Russell Baker, born a few years after WWI, wrote in 1981 that, “To children of the 1930s, World War I, though it had ended only 15 or 20 years earlier, already belonged to ancient history. I marveled that my parents had been alive when it was fought. It made them seem very, very old.” Its photos, he wrote, seemed “blurred and lifeless,” its uniforms “almost comically quaint,” its airplanes “antediluvi­an.”

Wwi-era motion picture technology helped distort the perception of a war that killed 16 million people. For the first time, distant civilians could see battlefiel­ds as moving imagery, but those same images gave the slaughter a comic-opera mien.

Those films are jerky, gray, scratchy and silent. Jackson said combatants were “trapped in a Charlie Chaplin world.” With only 12 or so frames a second (versus today’s 24), soldiers march in an awkward, rapid-fire manner that recalls mid-1980s Super Mario Bros. animation. Slow the film down, and soldiers bounce surreally like Buzz Aldrin on the moon.

Jackson alters the viewing experience via 21st-century technology. Meticulous­ly researched color bathes soldiers, equipment and landscape. (One reviewer found it startling to recall that battlefiel­d skies were blue.) Flashes, scratches and distortion­s of aging film disappear. Contrast and detail return to under- and overexpose­d segments.

Mid-century recordings of WWI veterans gently narrate the relentless story arc over constant background noise of gunfire and explosions. (When the artillery falls silent at Armistice, viewers realize how numbed they had become to the din.) This, in turn, is layered over the sounds of men talking and going about their daily routines. Sometimes, the voices sync perfectly with moving lips onscreen. Lip-readers analyzed what the soldiers were saying, and accent-appropriat­e actors dubbed the long-still voices — just often enough to persuade viewers to forget that these are silent films.

The greatest technical achievemen­t is restoring natural motion. Jackson’s technician­s interposed software-manufactur­ed frames between the originals to bring the film up to 24 frames per second. Viewers are free to contemplat­e the men rather than the medium.

But this technology raises ethical questions. Is this falsifying history and doing disservice to the original filmmakers?

In the 1980s, Ted Turner colorized venerable black-and-white films like “Casablanca.” Critic Roger Ebert voiced the dominant reaction: “Anyone who can accept the idea of the colorizati­on of black and white films has bad taste. The issue involved is so clear, and the artistic sin of colorizati­on is so fundamenta­lly wrong, that colorizati­on provides a pass-fail examinatio­n. If you ‘like’ colorized movies, it is doubtful that you know why movies are made, or why you watch them.”

In narration accompanyi­ng “They Shall Not Grow Old,” Jackson notes the impropriet­y of colorizing films where directors deliberate­ly chose black-and-white over color film. (Think of 2018’s “Roma” or 2011’s “The Artist.”) WWI cinematogr­aphers, he speculates, would gladly have exchanged black-and-white for color.

Perhaps Charlie Chaplin, too, would have used color film, had it been available. But it would still be abominable to colorize “The Little Tramp” today. Chaplin forged his art with the materials of his time. Michelange­lo didn’t have access to acrylic paint, but that’s no excuse for colorizing “David.”

But WWI film footage isn’t primarily art. In observing “David” or “The Little Tramp,” we strive to see the works through the artist’s eyes. While it’s interestin­g to view WWI footage through the eyes of the filmmakers, most of us likely aim to see through the eyes of those who, in John Mccrae’s (slightly edited) words, “lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow, loved and were loved, and now lie in Flanders fields.”

Jackson restored the battlefiel­d, not the battlefiel­d photograph­y. Doing so breathed life into the long-gone soldiers — life their loved ones could never experience in the flickering theaters of a century ago.

WWI film footage isn’t primarily art . ... While it’s interestin­g to view WWI footage through the eyes of the filmmakers, most of us likely aim to see through the eyes of those who, in John Mccrae’s (slightly edited) words, “lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow, loved and were loved, and now lie in Flanders fields.”

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