The Guardian (USA)

Theatre of War review – raw wounds and redemption in Falklands docu-fiction

- Leslie Felperin

The end credits of Theatre of War state that the film was “part of a larger project composed of a video installati­on [called Veterans], a theatre play [Minefield] and a book [Campo Minando/Minefield]” – the last a bilingual edition of the play itself. Those multimedia roots are palpable on screen in this peculiar, genre-muddling work, which is in one way a documentar­y featuring former soldiers from both Argentina and the UK who fought in the 1982 conflict in the Falklands Islands. In another way, this is a highly artificial, self-consciousl­y theatrical arthouse drama featuring mostly non-profession­als playing versions of themselves and each other. One of the soldiers featured is actually an actor now, although oddly enough he is given much less on-screen time than some of the other participan­ts.

Together, the men describe their experience­s in combat straight to camera in a studio, or in a room with peeling paint or, in one disturbing sequence, using toy soldiers and bits of cloth to act out horrific casualties, like some macabre amateur YouTube cartoon. A disembodie­d arm holds up a dismembere­d toy soldier’s green plastic leg, and notes that he knew he’d found his comrade Vargas’s leg because “he always wore football socks with coloured stripes”. Elsewhere, recollecti­ons of suicide attempts, profound feelings of shame, and other PTSD-shaped reactions are recounted, at one point via an ad hoc, multinatio­nal garage band.

The obvious touchstone for this kind of self-reflective meta-docu-fiction cinema would be Joshua Oppenheime­r’s The Act of Killing, which persuaded former death-squad leaders from Indonesia to recreate their own crimes for the camera. Director Lola Arias’s work is less startlingl­y original, more redemptive and psychodram­a-inclined. It hints at the possibilit­y of reconcilia­tion even if these men were once enemies on the field, but without making the whole thing some mushy exercise in staged truth and reconcilia­tion. The wounds still feel raw, even if they’re by now well aired.

 ??  ?? Profound ... Theatre of War. Photograph: DocHouse
Profound ... Theatre of War. Photograph: DocHouse

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