I just reviewed 1917 here the other day, although that review won't appear here until tomorrow, and the viewing of which caused me to recall the trench scenes of this film, Paths of Glory.
Paths of Glory is a black and white film directed by Stanley Kubrik and featuring Kirk Douglas as a French lawyer serving as an officer during the Great War. The movie is a fictionalized account of an actual event in which French soldiers were tried for cowardice for their actions during a 1916 advance. More than half the movie concerns their fate in French legal proceedings so the film is both a legal drama as well as a war picture.
Considered an anti war drama in typical reviews, the film contains one of the best filmed depictions of trench warfare ever made, surpassed only recently by the depictions in the English movie 1917. The film was regarded as so critical in this regards that the French managed to put pressure on United Artists not to release the film in France for nearly twenty years. Release in Germany and Switzerland was delayed so as to not offend the French, and the film was not released in Spain until 1986. U.S. military establishments would not show the film.
In modern terms the film is mild as an anti war film compared to films on the Vietnam War. And the degree to which any antiwar film is successful in conveying that message is always debatable. At any rate, as a drama and a depiction of World War One trench warfare, the film does well.
In terms of material details, the film is a good one, accurately portraying uniforms and equipment of the French Army of the Great War.
No comments:
Post a Comment