Chicago Sun-Times

FOR‘ DUNKIRK’

★ ★ ★ ★

- RICHARD ROEPER Email: rroeper@ suntimes. com

ABritish single- seat Spitfire glides in near silence along the beaches of Dunkirk, France, no more than a hundred feet above the dull- colored sand and the bright, azure waters.

The Royal Air Force pilot has run out of fuel, and he has run out of options. Even if he manages to complete a successful landing on the beach, his fate is sealed.

This is but one brief moment in Christophe­r Nolan’s “Dunkirk— but the beautiful and mournful and breathtaki­ng visual of that lone plane outlined against the sky and the sand and the water is so powerful and so indelible, if I close my eyes, I can see it as clearly as when it appeared on the big screen.

“Dunkirk” is filled with such unforgetta­ble scenes — some epic in scope, filmed in deep long shots, others so intimate and claustroph­obic we have to remember to take a breath. It is a great film about one of the most pivotal battles inWorldWar II, in which the ultimate goal of the heroes was not to emerge victorious but to somehow find a way to retreat in order to regroup and fight another day.

The events in “Dunkirk” take place some 18 months before the bombing of Pearl Harbor plunged the United States intoWorldW­ar II, but many historians say if things had gone differentl­y on those beaches in May and June of 1940, Europe would have been overrun by the Nazis.

Writer/ director Nolan has built his enormously successful career traffickin­g in the time- bending and the fantastica­l (“Memento,” “Inception,” the “Dark Knight” trilogy), but with “Dunkirk” he delivers a faithful and deeply respectful retelling of history — albeit while zig- zagging along the timeline and showing the same event from multiple viewpoints. Itmakes for an enthrallin­g if at times slightly confusing work that demands ( and commands) our undivided attention.

The opening sequence has the pace and the feel of the third act of many a war film— and in fact the entire movie feels like a final act. There’s very little exposition, almost no backstory. Everything is focused on the situation at hand.

Nearly 400,000 total Allied troops, most of them French and British, have been penned in by the Germans— but we follow just a small band of troops, and then just one soldier, a callow Brit named Tommy ( Fionn Whitehead in a strong everyman performanc­e), as he scrambles over fences, dashes down abandoned streets and dives for cover while bullets reign all about.

When Tommy finally stumbles onto theMole— an extended jetty at the outer harbor of Dunkirk — he is metwith an overwhelmi­ng and almost surreal tableau: thousands of Allied troops standing in long, parallel lines, facing the English Channel. They don’t even bother with their weapons, because their rifles are useless at this point.

The Channel is the only means of escape— but the waters are too shallow for larger British Navy vessels to pick up the men, and Luftwaffe planes are periodical­ly buzzing overhead, dropping bombs on troops that are sitting ducks. It seems to be an untenable situation sure to result in thousands upon thousands of Allied casualties.

In England, the call goes out for civilian boats of all manner and size to come to the aid of their countrymen — and literally hundreds of motor boats, steamers, barges, private yachts and fishing boats set out for Dunkirk, to retrieve the troops and bring them all the way home or to Navy ships awaiting off the coast.

With Hans Zimmer’s pounding, electrifyi­ng score and some perfectly timed and sometimes jarring editing choices ramping up the tension, “Dunkirk” weaves multiple storylines, as we experience the massive evacuation effort from the perspectiv­e of a number of angles, including:

A quietly determined, middle- aged civilian boat captain ( Mark Rylance in a brilliant performanc­e) who says men his age create these wars— so the least he can do is try to save some of the young men whose lives are in peril.

A noble British Naval commander ( Kenneth Branagh, excellent as always) who takes on the nearly impossible mission of evacuating tens of thousands of Allied troops. The commander wistfully notes one can practicall­y see home fromDunkir­k, and yet it might as well be a thousand miles away.

Two RAF pilots ( Jack Lowden and Tom Hardy) engaging in one dogfight after another with the enemy, sometimes just a few hundred feet above the water.

A shell- shocked British soldier ( CillianMur­phy) whose mere presence on a civilian boat puts the captain and his crew of two teenage boys in peril.

A group of soldiers hunkered in the hull of a boat sitting in the sand at the edge of the water, waiting for the tide to come in as they sustain enemy fire and deal with a possible traitor in their midst.

Nearly every scene in “Dunkirk” brings about another moment of crisis, another opportunit­y for heroics, another instance of young soldiers and their commanding officers scrambling to evacuate while facing peril at every turn.

This is an intense but not especially violent film. Nolan opted for a PG- 13 rating and eschewed graphic scenes of bloodshed in favor of focusing on the emotional, psychologi­cal and spiritual challenges facing these young soldiers.

Fine work from the cast, from veterans such as Rylance and Murphy and Hardy and Branagh, through newcomers such as Whitehead and pop singer Harry Styles.

But the star of “Dunkirk” is the movie itself. Nolan has crafted a tight, gripping, deeply involving and unforgetta­ble film that ranks among the best war movies of the decade.

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 ?? WARNER BROS. ?? Fionn Whitehead stars as Tommy in “Dunkirk.”
WARNER BROS. Fionn Whitehead stars as Tommy in “Dunkirk.”
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