Los Angeles Times

Fresh takes on war for our taut times

- justin.chang@latimes.com

We are continuall­y reminded of this by history both distant and recent. We are reminded by TV series as different as “Game of Thrones” and “Twin Peaks: The Return.”

But we are reminded perhaps most of all by Hollywood, which, even in a summer that has lived up to its annual promise of disposable fluff has also proven surprising­ly willing to send its characters to war.

This is not unpreceden­ted. War films may be thought of chiefly as the domain of the fall awards season, but that rule was broken at least as early as 1998, by a July release called “Saving Private Ryan.”

The just-concluded summer of 2017 may not have produced a critical and commercial colossus of “Ryan’s” scale — or maybe it has, given the rapturous reception for “Dunkirk” — but it has provided its own myriad answers to the old question of war: What is it good for?

Plenty, to judge by the fictional interspeci­es clash at the heart of “War for the Planet of the Apes,” a supremely accomplish­ed piece of classical studio filmmaking that earns its evocation of such pantheon war films as “The Great Escape” and “The Bridge on the River Kwai.”

“Wonder Woman,” for its part, derives some dramatic heft from its wartime backdrop, but by cleverly straddling the line between history and fantasy, it treats war primarily as a setting rather than as a subject.

In this regard it stands in striking contrast to the summer’s more experiment­al, explorator­y war films, Christophe­r Nolan’s “Dunkirk” and Kathryn Bigelow’s “Detroit,” which might seem to have little in common apart from a city-based title starting with the fourth letter of the alphabet.

One film tackles a fateful early chapter of World War II, while the other revisits a horrifying episode from the civil unrest that gripped Detroit in 1967. One is a runaway critical and commercial hit, the other a polarizing box-office flop.

Yet despite their difference­s, both films have radically updated the war movie for our uniquely troubled present moment and have done so with a formal and narrative audacity that can seem rare and exciting in any season.

In “Dunkirk,” Nolan turns a historic problemthe solving exercise — the 1940 evacuation of Allied troops from the French port city of Dunkirk — into a cinematic one, tracking a mass rescue effort along three distinct yet gradually convergent lines of action. The result is less a straightfo­rward portrait of combat than a bravura symphony of wartime chaos, in which soldiers separated by time and space are connected by the very language of the medium as well as by their common cause.

A week’s worth of harrowing conflict is splintered into 106 minutes’ worth of taut, frenzied spectacle, during which we become increasing­ly aware of how utterly at mercy of their physical surroundin­gs these soldiers are and how dramatical­ly their circumstan­ces can change in an instant.

The elemental peril of these men’s circumstan­ces make “Dunkirk” perhaps one of the movies’ purest examples of how character is revealed through action. We may not always remember the names of these predominan­tly British soldiers, but we remember them for their displays of heroism and cowardice, their willingnes­s to sacrifice either their own lives or those of their comrades when confronted with near-certain death.

Unlike most World War II films, “Dunkirk” avoids showing any overt bloodshed or even a glimpse of the enemy, apart from the occasional distant shot of a Nazi plane — a conscious choice that lends this blockbuste­r art film a curious element of abstractio­n.

No such distance is present in “Detroit,” an unflinchin­g realist docudrama that spends most of its time reconstruc­ting the notorious Algiers Motel incident of July 25-26, 1967, thrusting us into a tumultuous and ultimately fatal clash between white-supremacis­t cops and terrified civilians, most of them black men.

Bigelow and her screenwrit­er, Mark Boal, establish their context at the outset, using animation and archival footage to outline the inflamed racial tensions that made the heavily segregated Motor City a war zone waiting to happen. But rather than continuing to examine that war zone in a broadcanva­s manner, the filmmakers shift their focus to the Algiers, in an extended hour-plus sequence that becomes a nightmaris­h vision of pleading black faces and leering white ones, in which dread gathers as slowly but surely as blood.

The unedifying nature of this story goes a long way toward explaining why “Detroit,” despite its largely admiring reviews (my own included), has also drawn its share of condemnati­on, including the accusation that it amounts to a white filmmaker’s insensitiv­e visualizat­ion of black pain.

It’s fair to question the perspectiv­e being represente­d in “Detroit” and also to ask what purpose is served by a reconstruc­tion this grueling. My own answer would be that while Bigelow certainly has a talent for dramatizin­g brutality (the film would scarcely have generated this much anger otherwise), her approach strikes me as compassion­ate rather than callous and principled in its determinat­ion to confront the ugliness of white supremacy head-on.

Bigelow and Boal’s specific choice of narrative may not be the ideal one for a title as all-encompassi­ng as “Detroit,” but it strikes me as a defensible one nonetheles­s. Still, that their film has been attacked as a representa­tional failure is a telling reminder that we often look to war movies — even those that offer only a partial view of events, from “Schindler’s List” to “Black Hawk Down” to Bigelow’s own “The Hurt Locker” — for a definitive, comprehens­ive rendering of history.

Films like “Detroit” are expected to say it all, to not only to recount history but also to do it in a way that redresses history’s mistakes.

Those strictures don’t leave an imaginativ­e filmmaker a lot of room to play with form or attempt an unconventi­onal narrative strategy. That one film has been a success while the other has struggled to find an audience is in some ways a function of their respective genres. “Dunkirk” is a thriller that leaves you shaken but edified; “Detroit” is a horror movie that leaves you benumbed and depressed.

The spectacle of mass death in “Dunkirk” has the cruel but impersonal efficiency of mechanized warfare, which audiences have long been conditione­d to accept. The terrible intimacy and racist pathology of the violence in “Detroit” is infinitely more difficult to take.

And that difficulty, finally, may have less to do with a difference in filmmaking sensibilit­y than with the inequity of history itself. It’s worth noting the curious coincidenc­e that gave us these two particular war movies in a summer that also witnessed a terrifying resurgence in white supremacy and neo-Nazism in the U.S.

But while “Dunkirk” is certainly a movie about the threat of fascism, it engages that threat obliquely rather than directly and with the absolute assurance of a victorious outcome. The film may end in an uneasy stalemate, but we exit the theater comfortabl­e in the knowledge that the bad guys will be decisively defeated.

“Detroit” offers us no such consolatio­n. It’s a raw wound of a movie, a seething broadside against issues of police brutality and systemic injustice that collapses the distance between the civil rights movement and the era of Black Lives Matter. It angers and disturbs, in no small part, because the war it captures rages on.

 ?? Melinda Sue Gordon Warner Bros. Pictures ?? FIONN WHITEHEAD as British soldier Tommy from Christophe­r Nolan’s World War II drama “Dunkirk.”
Melinda Sue Gordon Warner Bros. Pictures FIONN WHITEHEAD as British soldier Tommy from Christophe­r Nolan’s World War II drama “Dunkirk.”
 ?? Annapurna ?? A HARROWING sequence from “Detroit” by filmmaker Kathryn Bigelow.
Annapurna A HARROWING sequence from “Detroit” by filmmaker Kathryn Bigelow.

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