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Review of "Gods & Generals
Preview Movie trailer
What
is it about the Civil War? We can't quite get over it. It's a story we
tell ourselves over and over, never sure we've gotten it right.
There's good reason for that. It's a complex story, and the easy
categories of South Bad, North Good don't do it justice. Yet, just to
demonstrate our ambivalence, it's the South we pine for. More reenactors
want to be Rebs than Yanks. No Northern gal holds the heart-place of
Scarlett O'Hara. You can attribute this to romanticizing the losing
side, but nobody romanticizes Hitler.
Ronald Maxwell's trilogy on the Civil War, based on the novels by
Michael and Jeff Shaara, began ten years ago with "Gettysburg." This new
release is "Gods and Generals," and if it gets the attention it
deserves, we'll also get to see the final installment, "Last Full
Measure."
"Gods and Generals" easily takes the head of a long line of films about
the Civil War. Maxwell's work sets a standard of comprehensiveness,
realism, and balance that no other film attempts, much less achieves. It
does this through meticulous attention to period detail and
unprecedented use of on-site photography, bringing viewers a "You Are
There" experience that only film could provide.
Much in the new film is of highest quality: the cinematography is
dazzling, and the music brings it to life. The battle sequences are
overwhelming; not merely bloody (though they are sometimes that) but so
evocative of real face-to-face warfare that they are exhausting. The
opening of "Saving Private Ryan" is not as wrenching as this, because in
the WW II drama you couldn't see the eyes of the man you're killing.
But in quieter dialogue sequences the film lags. It aims too low,
shooting for sentimentality rather than tragedy. The difference is that
sentiment brings an easy tear to the eye, while tragedy opens a sudden
chasm of thoughts and emotions, evoking stunned wonder that lingers in
memory. "Gods and Generals" falls short of such complexity, though it
easily raises tears.
During the screening I scribbled in my notes, "Just a series of staged
dramatic moments." Later I wondered, Well, isn't that what every film
is? Problem is, it shouldn't show so much. And in a period movie like
this, where the scenes are full of oldfangled dialogue, it can drag even
more. Not every actor can wrap his mouth around "shall." Try this: "I
was able to obtain a good spyglass and could ascertain beyond all doubt
that our house is still standing." Can you deliver that better than the
unfortunate saddled with it in the movie?
An early scene between Jeff Daniels and his on-screen wife, Mira Sovino,
demonstrates the problem. Daniels repeats the same role for which he won
accolades in "Gettysburg" ten years ago. (It's unfortunate that the
films are out of sequence, and this second film actually precedes
"Gettysburg" historically. Future viewers of the series will wonder what
kind of miracle spa Col. Joshua Chamberlain went to between May and June
of 1863.) While I think Daniels wants to portray Chamberlain as
thoughtful, he comes across as merely passive and slow on the uptake.
This is effective when he's a battered everyman in a disastrous retreat
sequence, but is merely sodden in an earlier scene with his wife. In
this stilted set-piece, Sorvino must not only be angry with her husband
in ponderous language, but also recount a dream, and then wind up by
reciting a poem. On the page, it's a nightmare. Sorvino overcomes it,
however, through the miracle of what experts call "acting." She uses her
breathing, breaks up lines, develops a catch in her throat, and in every
way runs circles around the horsehair-stuffed dialogue.
Robert Duvall, as Robert E. Lee, is likewise brilliant in delivering
material that could have easily sounded stiff. His Lee is fundamentally
reserved, a quiet, thoughtful person of rare empathy, and as such he
exerts gravitational pull over every scene he's in. In an interview
Duvall explained that when confronted with long stretches of period
dialogue his impulse was to "take the curse off" by looking for physical
business to break it up, a prop to handle or stirrup to adjust. For one
scene he suggested that Lee be seen soaking an injured hand in Epsom
salts. "That wasn't how they wanted things," he said, "they wanted it to
be just straightforward." Duvall played the material as required, yet
his impeccable instincts make him shine in every scene.
The big surprise of the film is its strong theme of faith, specifically
that of Stonewall Jackson, played by Stephen Lang. Jackson is a harder
man than Lee, and one whose personal tragedies have led him to absolute
trust in God's providence no matter what it brings. This daring faith is
the centerpiece of the movie and its true hero.
The Jackson character recalls many Civil War films gone before, as it
depicts the epic struggle of a man and his beard. It is a false beard,
and you would think scientists had a cure for this by now, but no. With
a hat pulled low over his eyes, and the beard aggressively encamped
throughout his lower face, Lang is cast back upon few facial resources,
chiefly consisting of nose. Many of the makeup shortcomings of the
earlier film have been improved here, but the false beards are still
overpopulated and thick as sofa cushions. Lang's is an eloquent nose, as
noses go (note to editor: do not substitute "as noses run"), but faced
with such a challenge even Gielgud's nose would stand perplexed.
The shortcomings of "Gods and Generals," its hokey moments and
occasional makeup and accent flubs, are minor compared to the
extraordinary scope of its achievement. The Civil War is a story we keep
telling ourselves, and the retelling is now part of the story. Ronald
Maxwell's films tell this vexed story more clearly and fully than any
film has before, and move us one step closer toward the understanding
that will finally bring us rest.
Video Club: Since the members of each local group rent and watch videos
separately, then gather to discuss them in a meeting, or even over
email, it's not necessary for everyone to watch the same film. (If you
don't have a local group, start one!) This month, individuals should
choose among "Gone With the Wind" (1939), "The Red Badge of Courage"
(1951), "Shenandoah" (1965), and, if you can find it, the controversial
silent classic, "Birth of a Nation" (1915). Ask: why is it hard for us
to resolve our feelings about the Civil War? What changing attitudes do
these films show? Finally, and perhaps most eerie: why have the greatest
Civil War movies been released right before America enters a war?
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