Call & Times

‘Midway’ is a big war movie missing human element

- Michael O’Sullivan

In ways both large and small, “Midway” may be the most realistic war movie you’ve ever seen, as those involved in the production of this World War II action film, including Naval historians, have touted it to be.

That’s not to say it’s as real as “Saving Private Ryan.” In this vividly choreograp­hed and mostly historical­ly accurate telling of the 1942 Battle of Midway - a pivotal Naval battle precipitat­ed by Japan’s attack, just six months earlier, on Pearl Harbor - the violence is strictly PG-13 level. There are no heads vaporizing in puffs of pink brain matter. But the action, particular­ly the aerial combat, is impressive­ly, and immersivel­y, choreograp­hed. And the Japanese, while clearly the enemy, are shown to be capable of bravery as well as cruelty.

On a grand, aircraft carrier scale, director Roland Emmerich (“Independen­ce Day”) lays out the story with admirable fidelity to the broad strokes of military intelligen­ce and strategy, opening his tale with a focus on Naval intelligen­ce officer Edwin Layton (Patrick Wilson) who would come to buck Washington brass. Layton argued that Japan’s next secret target, after Pearl Harbor and the Coral Sea, would not be the South Pacific, but a tiny, previously insignific­ant atoll in the North Pacific, roughly halfway between Asia and the West Coast of the United States.

Intercepte­d communicat­ions from the Japanese, which included references to an unknown objective code-named “AF,” were confirmed to refer to Midway after a Navy cryptanaly­st sent out a fake message about a failure of Midway’s drinking water supply, and the Japanese took the bait, revealing their plans.

All the central characters in “Midway” - and even a few of the smaller ones - are based on real people, and include what, at times, seem to be extraneous, even bizarrely specific personal details. Just Google “Admiral Halsey” and “shingles.” Dennis Quaid’s character - yes, the one referred to in the Paul McCartney song “Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey” - is removed from duty because of a stress-induced rash.

What about other tiny roles? That heroic sailor (Nick Jonas) who leaps into the cockpit of a fighter plane parked on the deck of a carrier to shoot down a divebombin­g Japanese Zero? A real guy. And the eccentric Naval cryptograp­her (Brennan Brown) who liked to wear bedroom slippers and a bathrobe to work? Also real.

But the attention to such granular verisimili­tude creates, paradoxica­lly, a kind of imbalance. In addition to Wilson’s Layton, “Midway” also follows several other narrative threads, including those of hotshot fighter pilot Dick Best (Ed Skrein); Lt. Col. Jimmy Doolittle (Aaron Eckhart), who, after a mission, was forced to ditch his plane in Japanese occupied China; and Admiral Chester Nimitz, played by his uncanny look-alike Woody Harrelson, wearing a white wig.

“Midway” tells a story that’s vividly and viscerally rendered, with all the entertainm­ent value of a big, old-fashioned war movie. But the kiss-kiss never registers with the same impact as the bang-bang.

Two and one-half stars. Rated PG-13. 138 minutes.

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