After a 3 year gap, Spielberg turned to an adaptation of a
play about a horse. At the time, this was one of the rare occasions where I was
not interested in seeing a Spielberg film at the cinema and War Horse remains a film I find it hard
to care about. After a recent re-watch,
I still think there are good things about the film (for example, nobody stages a war scene like
Spielberg), but a lot of ‘meh’ and overwrought sentiment and a hideous John
Williams score signposting every emotion.
I’ll start with the negatives. The film’s non-equine protagonist, Albert (Jeremy
Irvine) is terrible. Doe-eyed,
insufferably optimistic, and with a horrible Devon accent, 20 minutes into the
film you’re practically screaming at him to get laid. He also vanishes out of the film for a good
while, replaced initially by Tom Hiddleston’s army captain, who at least
injects some charisma, then a nondescript group of German soldiers, and then a
nondescript French family, and then some more Germans. This is a strange move, Spielberg ditching
his human protagonist and instead relying on the audience buying into
successive characters’ mystical obsession with a horse.
The film’s climax, which reunites boy with horse, ties
everything together a little too neatly, as the French farmer, having bought
the horse for his beloved grandchild, bizarrely returns it to Albert. After War Of The Worlds and Minority Report both erring on the side
of saccharine, War Horse fits into
the pejorative category of a ‘Spielberg Ending’.
On the positive side it’s a technically amazing film,
featuring some incredible cinematography courtesy of regular Spielberg
collaborator (and full-on artist) Janusz Kaminski. It also benefits from a largely brilliant
cast, including Emily Watson and Peter Mullan as Albert’s parents, David
Thewlis, Hiddleston, Benedict Cumberbatch, and Toby Kebbell who manages one of
the few non-awful Geordie accents produced by a non-Geordie. The familiar faces make the horse’s odyssey
easier to follow. The Somme scenes are
incredible, Spielberg wisely refusing to make German soldiers outright bad guys
as he does with his WW2-set films. It’s
not a criticism to say that War Horse
has heart and is unashamedly sentimental; this is deliberate and the film fully
commits to it, it’s just that while the world has become more cynical over
time, Spielberg seems horribly naïve when he rose-tints the past.
Released the same year and envisioned as the first in a
trilogy (with Peter Jackson taking over the reins of the follows ups), The Adventures Of Tintin: The Secret Of The
Unicorn is, for me, everything that the fourth Indiana Jones film should
have been. I’m not 100% sure how much ‘directing’
is involved in directing a cartoon and the third film running, I was
questioning Spielberg’s choices. Having
been a fan of Herge’s comics as a kid, I had my worries that it would be
ruined, but these turned out to be unfounded, as Spielberg delivered probably
his most outright enjoyable film of his late phase.
Tintin himself (a motion capture an voice performance by
Jamie Bell) isn’t perfect. Too clean and
too innocent, he would be an insufferable goody-two-shoes were it not for Spielberg
and Bell fully committing to the character and the OTT nature of the story without
so much as a wink to the camera. I don’t
think characters look particularly brilliant, falling uncomfortably with feet
in both photo-real and comically unreal.
While Herge sold it time and again, it’s also hard to believe on film
that a slender character (who looks about 14 years old), could carry out such
amazing feats (and knock out a burly sailor with one punch). Simon Pegg and Nick Frost’s Thompson Twins
are just the right side of incredibly
annoying, but only just.
Despite that, Tintin
is a very enjoyable film, never more so than when it follows Tintin’s dog
Snowy. Immune to the effects Mo-Cap has
on human characters, Snowy allows Spielberg to have some real fun, with small
pockets of suspense, wonderful grace notes and flourishes which give the film
energy and a caper-ish quality. In fact,
the whole medium gives Spielberg fantastic license to up the ante on impossible
set pieces and impressive long takes, none more so than Captain Haddock’s alcohol-induced
ancestral flashbacks and the wonderfully ridiculous tank-bike-bird chase.
Andy Serkis’ Captain Haddock could easily have been a John
Candy-like blundering irritant but he is given an arc, a story, and some
genuine emotional heft. Spielberg keeps
the pace high throughout, the action suitably OTT and is faithful to the spirit
of the comics. So yeah, everything Crystal Skull should have been.
Since Schindler’s
List, one theme Spielberg has returned to time and again is a moral man in
immoral times. Amistad, Bridge Of Spies
and The Post all tell tales of men
trying to do the right thing in the face of the powers of the time. Lincoln
continues this theme, telling the story of the passing of the 13th
Amendment, which precipitated the abolition of slavery in America.
Here, despite the title, Spielberg does not opt for standard
biopic fare, showing Abe’s youth, struggles, formative political years, elections
etc. Instead we join him in his mid-50s
amid the Civil War and the film charts his dilemma: push legislation through that
will forever end slavery but prolong the war, or seek peace with the
Confederate states end the war and save thousands of lives, meaning slavery
will continue.
When it comes to actors, there are two categories: Daniel
Day Lewis, and everyone else. Only
clocking up 6 acting credits since the year 2000, he is picky about his
projects and never less than brilliant. Here,
he makes Abe Lincoln a magnetic character: tall and deliberate, moving
uneasily, and speaking calmly in a high register. The rare occasions where he is given cause to
raise his voice are devastating, including his “clothed in immense power!” speech,
preceded by a frustrated, authoritative open hand hitting a table. He is the epitome of grace, dignity, and
confidence in his actions. The one
moment where he is forced to make his moral choice, push for the amendment or
meet with the Confederate delegation to discuss peace terms, is the moment
which stays with you, such is your faith in him.
He’s ably supported by a remarkable cast, including David
Strathairn, Sally Field, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, James Spader, Jackie Earl Haley,
Jared Harris, and a powerhouse Tommy Lee Jones as Thaddeus Stevens. Casting recognisable faces across the board
is a wise move (Oliver Stone did as much in the labyrinthine JFK) as it helps the audience follow
difficult subject matter, and Lincoln
is certainly not the easiest film to follow.
Unless you take a close interest in the mechanics of the American
legislative process (in 1865), this is very dry material.
The dialogue appears authentic, Aaron Sorkin this is not,
with politicians hurling insults at one another in congress before making shady
deals in back offices. While the outcome
is a good one, it’s not the most engaging or cinematic journey to get there, essentially
amounting to politicians doing deals with and coercing one another,
manipulating the media, and trying every dirty trick to push forward their
agenda. This is drama with conversations,
not chases. While, like Schindler, the
character of Lincoln is probably somewhat whitewashed, Spielberg does well to
keep him from being a saint. For him,
the end justifies the means, and the means include threats and lying to Congress.
In a beautiful moment, Spielberg’s trademark ‘God Light’
floods into Lincoln’s chambers as he entertains his child, not betraying any
nerves about the outcome of the final vote.
Spielberg shows relative visual restraint through, letting Kaminski’s luscious
cinematography do the talking.
The main fault I had with Lincoln himself was that he spoke
entirely in speeches and parables (it’s joked about at one point), and this
becomes wearing by the end. It’s also
not really necessary to show that he died shortly after the result. For me, a more fitting ending would have been
seeing him walk away from his servant in that stooped gait of his, cutting back
to the look of admiration on the servant’s face, but I suppose killing your
main character by default stops this from being a ‘Spielberg Ending’. That can only be a good thing these days.
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