Christopher Nolan’s last two films not to feature a masked
man with some serious parent issues have both been difficult. I mean that in a good way; I am a fan of both
Inception and Interstellar but both are long, bursting with ideas, and heavy on
exposition. Following a bit of success
and granted some freedom by grateful studios, directors who do too much of this type of thing have a tendency to vanish up their own arses: for proof, see anything the
Wachowskis have churned out since The
Matrix (including the sequels), and anything Richard Kelly has done since Donnie Darko. Nolan has thankfully
grounded his grandiose sci-fi forays in a Spielbergian connection to family and
not allowed the CGI machine to sully his vision. So how does he follow up a film in which Matthew
McConaughey bent the known laws of space-time? He rescues soldiers from a
beach.
Dunkirk tells a
familiar and simple story: overwhelmed by the German army in 1940, 400,000
British troops are stranded on the eponymous beach awaiting rescue from a navy
vulnerable to U-Boat attacks, and facing annihilation from German bombers and
artillery. The solution: hundreds of
civilian boats sail the channel to rescue over 330,000 men. A military disaster turned into a human
triumph.
But that would be too simple a story for the man who made
the thriller-in-reverse Memento or
showed us dreams within dreams in Inception. Showing us the story from three perspectives
(soldiers trapped on the Dunkirk beach, a boat crossing the Channel, an RAF
spitfire squadron), each occurring over different but converging time periods,
Nolan shuffles his deck in a manner which results in one of the most tense
experiences I’ve had in a cinema.
From the opening scene in which soldiers wandering the
abandoned Dunkirk streets are fired upon by an unseen enemy, the viewer’s guts
are rarely less than wrenched. Wisely
casting actors rather than stars (no room for DiCaprio, McConaughey, or Bale
here) in key roles, Nolan at no time gives you certainty of anyone’s
survival. Even Tom Hardy’s stoic fighter
pilot has moments of dread. The ensemble
cast is excellent: Hardy is more reserved than we’re used to, Mark Rylance
continues his excellent form, Fionn Whitehead and, yes, Harry Styles are
effective as the soldiers, terrified and then plagued with survivor guilt. And
who could be better cast as officer class than James D’Arcy and Kenneth
Brannagh, the latter giving his best stiff upper lip.
What Nolan does really well is fill each segment with
pockets of suspense and then flit between them before anything is
resolved. Mark Rylance is the picture of
quiet dignity (until the heart stopping moment when he raises his voice) as a
civilian boat captain doing his part, but his rescue of Cillian Murphy’s
unpredictable, shell shocked soldier causes tension. Tom Hardy’s fuel gauge is damaged, leaving
him (and us) guessing at how much flight time he has left for almost the whole
film. We find out early on that there is
a U-Boat in the water, meaning nobody at sea is safe. A squad decides to wait for high tide in an
abandoned fishing boat; a solid strategy until German troops decide to use it
for target practice, leaving a choice between being shot and drowned. Every part of the film is designed to crank
up the tension.
Probably the most effective tool in Nolan’s arsenal is Hans
Zimmer’s score. From the recurring
ticking clock motif, jagged Bernard Hermann-like violins, to lengthy drone
sounds, ascending in tone, it is designed to ensure that nails are bitten. As one might expect, the film looks incredible.
With Nolan admirably preferring to do things in-camera rather than rely on CGI,
every bomb impact, bullet, dogfight, and sinking ship is real and visceral. And while it may seem churlish to comment on
a film’s running time, Dunkirk clocks
in at a relatively nippy hour and 46 minutes, meaning there is no waste, no
lulls, and nothing superfluous.
For a director who has for some time dabbled in the cerebral
side of cinema, here he is as thrilling and emotive as a younger Spielberg
(think the opening of Saving Private Ryan
stretched to feature length, or Duel
with added boats and bravery). There are
no Big Ideas on display here, just pure, edge-of-your-seat entertainment which
makes the final denouement, returning soldiers feeling like failures but greeted
like heroes, all the more rewarding.
That it plays out to Churchill’s famous “we shall never surrender”
speech is on the nose but plays beautifully.
Victory from the jaws of defeat.
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