"1917"
Sam Mendes’ “1917”,
based on a story from his family’s history, see two British soldiers, played by
George MacKay and Dean-Charles Chapman, tasked with delivering an urgent message
from a World War I trench to a nearby regiment, in an effort to keep them from
falling into a fiendish trap set by the Hun. Needless to say, there is much unfortunate
incident along the way.
The tale is told as though in a single take and in real time
(well, almost), and is thoroughly gripping, truly bringing home the horror of conflict, as well as paying tribute to the concepts of duty and comradeship.
Mendes and Krysty Wilson-Cairns’ script (along with Thomas Newman’s score) never
allows the tension to slip, even during the rare moments of apparent calm; there are
plentiful clever visual set-pieces (cinematography by Roger Deakins); and the
parade of star cameos is only slightly distracting. Beautifully realised, this
is cinema at its most powerfully immersive.
Labels: cinema, film review
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