Los Angeles Times

MORTAL AWARDS COMBAT

War works its way into five films this season. Why is it so popular? Maybe it’s the underlying message of hope.

- BY RANDEE DAWN

Every awards season, the battle for best picture is a brutal assault. Films claw their way up from the heap of other releases, assailing audiences’ senses with marketing and buzz — all to hopefully stand triumphant atop the pile of alsorans, declaring victory.

No wonder war movies are perenniall­y popular this time of year. And this season, there are no fewer than five lobbying for attention: “Jojo Rabbit,” “A Hidden Life” and the December releases “1917,” “Midway” and even “The Two Popes” all take us to war zones — but not always the battlefiel­ds you might expect.

“The easiest way to have maximum effect is to show a bullet entering the human heart,” says Anthony McCarten, screenwrit­er of “The Two Popes” and 2017’s Churchill-focused, Oscar-winning “Darkest Hour.” “But there’s zero emotional impact in someone dying unless we care about that person — that’s where a war story becomes difficult to write.”

Difficult but not impossible, and each of the five films has found its way in through different routes. Four of the five films are set in the European theater during the world wars, while McCarten’s “Popes” flashes back to Argentina’s Dirty War of the 1970s and ’80s. Each looks and feels unique, in part because the destructio­n is shown not through the eyes of politician­s or battle-hardened soldiers but those in the middle and on the fringe.

That explains “Jojo’s” magical realist quality: Its title protagonis­t is 10 and a devoted member of the Hitler Youth. He’s in his element, the world is his oyster. “It’s not your drab, worn-out version of Germany you often see,” says producer Carthew Neal. “He’s seeing the world around him as very colorful.”

That was such a 180-degree turn from typical war visuals that the filmmakers had to give explicit instructio­ns while filming in the Czech Republic to spruce things up. “We were shooting in Prague and they constantly have World War II films there,” Neal notes. “We had to encourage the locals to change their point of view — they’re so used to bringing out the wrecks and we were saying we wanted a lot of color.”

Austria is bucolic in “A Hidden Life,” because the war shows up in nontraditi­onal ways. Yes, bombers fly over a small village where there lives a man who refuses to fight in the war. But the battle is more about him against his neighbors, who turn against him.

“The war intrudes slowly,” says producer Grant Hill. “We see it in microcosm. They’re not being bombed; for the most part they’re not being badly treated. But there’s another sort of destructio­n that can come out of this. The tentacles of the war are still the same.”

“1917" and “Midway” have more traditiona­l war settings, but tell their stories through the eyes of those enmeshed in it. “Midway” weaves three stories — Japanese high command, U.S. Naval intelligen­ce officers and U.S. Naval pilots — alongside realistic visual effects that writer Wes

Tooke hopes will put audiences into the cockpit.

“We’re trying to show this through the perspectiv­e of these pilots, in a way it hasn’t been told before,” says Tooke. “I wanted people to understand what it was like to get into a piece of entirely analog equipment, then diving into an enemy ship.”

“1917" follows two young soldiers tasked with a giant responsibi­lity, and it’s “locked into their viewpoint,” says Krysty WilsonCair­ns, who wrote the script with director Sam Mendes. The camera follows the soldiers’ harrowing journey. “People rarely make films about WWI,” she says. “We wanted to show how it was fought by everyone, including women. That was far more accessible.”

“Popes,” for its part, is not so much a “war” film — but it does feature a character whose life was shaped by the Dirty War. McCarten’s script focused on the murders of priests and women’s bodies being dumped into the sea rather than direct battles. “How you represent war in any film — you have to make a choice,” he says. “You can show it graphicall­y and at scale, a la ‘Saving Private Ryan,’ or you can take a minimalist approach like the Russian roulette scene in ‘The Deer Hunter.’ ”

But however a film decides to portray war — from a child’s point of view or a religious man’s — the motive is generally the same, suggests McCarten. “They’re all telling us that war is a dirty business, and when will we evolve as a species to realize that and find other alternativ­es,” he says.

But Wilson-Cairns suggests there’s another reason we keep going back to our battlefiel­ds. “It’s an incredibly muddy world right now,” she says. “These films are comforting in their simplicity. And the main thing war films teach us in general is that we can overcome everything. These countries joined together, people from all different walks of life, and showed there’s nothing we can’t achieve — when we set aside our crap and get to business.”

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 ?? Larry Horricks 20th Century Fox Film Corporatio­n ??
Larry Horricks 20th Century Fox Film Corporatio­n
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 ?? François Duhamel Universal Pictures/DreamWorks Pictures ??
François Duhamel Universal Pictures/DreamWorks Pictures
 ?? Reiner Bajo Lionsgate ??
Reiner Bajo Lionsgate
 ?? Netf lix ??
Netf lix
 ?? Fox Searchligh­t Pictures ??
Fox Searchligh­t Pictures

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