Los Angeles Times

Love and war go for a tedious ride

- — Gary Goldstein

There’s sweep and gloss to “The Ottoman Lieutenant,” but this well-intentione­d, sumptuousl­y shot tale of love and war, directed by Joseph Ruben, lacks the emotional depth and romantic grandeur to fulfill its epic ambitions.

Just before the start of World War I, 23-year-old Lillie (Hera Hilmar), an independen­t, idealistic Philadelph­ia nurse, travels to a hamlet in then-Ottoman Turkey to assist at a needy medical facility.

But upon arriving first in Istanbul, Lillie winds up with a military escort, the dashing Ottoman army lieutenant Ismail (Michiel Huisman). It’s not a question of if these two will lock lips, but when.

War breaks out and Lillie digs in at the busy medical mission run by its troubled founder (Ben Kingsley) and an earnest, younger physician, Jude (Josh Hartnett), who also falls for Lillie. Can the bespectacl­ed doc compete with the swashbuckl­ing soldier? Two guesses.

In the war, the Turks are fighting the Russians, the Christians and Muslims are at odds and the Armenian genocide seems to be occurring largely off-screen.

If all we had was Jeff Stockwell’s simplistic script to go by, it’d be hard to know whom to root for. Fortunatel­y, there’s actual history.

The Icelandic Hilmar is the weakest link here, low on the kind of vibrant beauty and passionate presence her iconic-type part demands. Hilmar’s indefinite American accent, even more evident in her wan voice-overs, doesn’t help. “The Ottoman Lieutenant.” Rating: R, for some war violence. Running time: 1 hour, 50 minutes. Playing: In general release

 ?? Anne Marie Fox Paladin ?? A GUY (Michiel Huisman), a gal (Hera Hilmar) and a world war: In better hands, it could’ve been an epic.
Anne Marie Fox Paladin A GUY (Michiel Huisman), a gal (Hera Hilmar) and a world war: In better hands, it could’ve been an epic.

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