Dunkirk: A war film that dares to celebrate a British triumph

Blackleaf

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Think how many years have passed since there has been anything like it: British audiences expected to pack cinemas to see a British movie about one of the great British moments of World War II: Dunkirk.

Christopher Nolan’s deafening epic about the evacuation from the northern French beaches in May 1940 provides an answer to fans who have demanded for years: ‘Why are we always given Hollywood films about how the Americans battled Hitler all on their own?’

The Dunkirk film shows more ships sinking than stay afloat. And praised be the Lord, here at last is a film without even a token American...

A war film that dares to celebrate a British triumph: After decades of movies lionising the Yanks, MAX HASTINGS says Dunkirk should be required viewing for all schoolchildren


By Max Hastings for the Daily Mail
22 July 2017



Think how many years have passed since there has been anything like it: British audiences expected to pack cinemas to see a British movie about one of the great British moments of World War II: Dunkirk.

Christopher Nolan’s deafening epic about the evacuation from the northern French beaches in May 1940 provides an answer to fans who have demanded for years: ‘Why are we always given Hollywood films about how the Americans battled Hitler all on their own?’

The war movie is such a staple of popular entertainment, a huge element of modern culture, that it is amazing the British have for so long stayed out of it, preferring to make genre pictures about gritty life in northern cities, or rom-coms about smart London.


Smiling troops make their way back to Britain following the dramatic evacuation of Dunkirk during the Second World War


Part of the trouble, of course, was getting the money for any movie that did not star Americans, and having to pay the cosmic expense of getting hold of tanks, warships, Spitfires or Flying Fortresses.

I once had a conversation about this with the great film director Stanley Kubrick, who was enthusing about a real-life 1944 episode in which the French Resistance battled with Nazi Panzers. I asked why he wasn’t making a film of the story. He replied: ‘Have you any idea what it costs to hire even one German tank for a week, never mind 20 of them?’

Computer graphics have changed all that. Nowadays, giant action scenes and ship-sinkings such as those that feature in Dunkirk can be shot for a fraction of the money Cecil B. DeMille spent on thousands of live extras on movies such as his The Ten Commandments (1923), or Lew Grade wasted on his ruinous Raise The Titanic (1980).


Troops involved in the evacuation of British soldiers from Dunkirk, which was one of the largest military operations of the war


The Dunkirk film shows more ships sinking than stay afloat. And praised be the Lord, here at last is a film without even a token American.

Some of the best war films of the past have been compromised by the need to appease the U.S. box office. The Great Escape (1963) included Steve McQueen, whose motor-biking stunt makes for terrific viewing, but outraged all those who pointed out that no American remotely like him was involved in the real 1943 Tom, Dick and Harry tunnelling out of Stalag Luft III, and no bikes either.

Back in 1957, The Bridge On The River Kwai offered a stunning study of British PoWs on the Burma railway, led by Alec Guinness as their mad colonel. But the on-screen hero had to be the American William Holden, who played the saboteur who destroyed the bridge the stupid British had built for the Japanese.

Richard Attenborough, who should have known better, made the Americans much smarter than the British — headed by a super-snooty Dirk Bogarde as Lieutenant General ‘Boy’ Browning — in his 1977 epic A Bridge Too Far about the September 1944 dash for the Rhine bridges.


Troops wade through the sea toward a rescue boat as 338,000 men were rescued from the beaches in Operation Dynamo


Robert Redford played the heroic American paratroop officer Major Julian Cook, who stormed across the Waal river at Nijmegen under German fire. The on-screen Cook treats the sluggardly, tea-brewing British with contempt — as, too, in many respects, does the whole movie.

The ultimate Hollywood crime against British wartime history was U-571, a 2000 movie that hijacked the Royal Navy’s heroic 1941 achievement in salvaging an Enigma cipher machine from a stricken U-boat, and portrayed this as an all-American achievement.

For my taste, and for that of many others of my generation, most of the best of our home-grown war movies were made in black-and-white, during or soon after World War II. Mrs Miniver, Target For Tonight, In Which We Serve and suchlike were designed as propaganda, and intensely sentimental. But they captured a mood of the time which even seven decades later brings a lump to many throats.

So, too, do the greats of the Fifties: The Dam Busters, Reach For The Sky, The Cruel Sea, The Colditz Story, Ice Cold In Alex.

I have always thought that an important element in their credibility is that those who made them had been there. Cast, directors and writers alike experienced the war.

The men who played the aircrew in The Dam Busters were contemporaries of the real-life fliers: Richard Todd, who starred as Guy Gibson, served with the Parachute Regiment in Normandy.

The Cruel Sea — and especially stars Jack Hawkins and Donald Sinden — brilliantly captures the mood and look of the Battle of the Atlantic, an especially fine achievement because it was made long before modern special effects were available. I have never seen a film — not even the excellent German U-boat epic Das Boot — which matches its portrayal of the salt-soaked privations of the men serving in small ships in poor weather, which meant most of the weather, even before the enemy entered the story.


Troops help an injured soldier during the evacuation which followed a failed attempt to set up a base on mainland Europe


John Mills, Hawkins, Todd and their generation of actors brought to British war movies an intensity of feeling, an absolute belief in the people they were portraying, that their modern counterparts find hard to emulate.

When 21st-century stars don khaki or blue, they almost always look exactly what they are — thespians doing their best to take seriously something that really seems to them remote and absurd. A critic might react to my observations by saying: ‘Yes, but in those old films there was never any blood. Everybody was either alive or they were dead.

‘Today’s movies are far more realistic about showing what war is really like, with people’s arms blown off on camera — as in the opening scene of Saving Private Ryan — or their guts trailing all over the screen.’

That is true enough. Yet many of the bloodiest modern American war films, which movie-goers love, most notably Platoon and Full Metal Jacket (both about the Vietnam war), seem grotesquely melodramatic.


The operation was scheduled after hundreds of thousands of British, French, Belgian and other Allied forces became trapped


Nobody has ever produced a shred of evidence that in Vietnam the communists forced prisoners to play Russian roulette, as in The Deer Hunter.

I recoil from all Oliver Stone’s movies, but especially Platoon, which has precious little to do with real life, or even real death, as I understand this as a historian and past witness of wars. Although Band Of Brothers (the story of Easy Company of the U. S. Army 101st Airborne Division in World War II) was a TV mini-series rather than a straight-up cinema film, it represented one of the finest attempts of recent years to depict soldiers in combat.

Historian Stephen Ambrose, who wrote the original book, and producers Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks, share a more romantic view about warriors than I would myself adopt, but they are not wrong that comradeship is war’s sole redeeming feature.

Odd as this may sound, to me that superlative comedy M*A*S*H has more truth in it about war, and especially Vietnam — though it was supposedly set in Korea — than some of the biggest and noisiest American epics such as Midway and Pearl Harbor.


Troops wait in the rubble for a rescue. Prime Minister Winston Churchill hailed the rescue attempt as a 'miracle of deliverance'


So much that happens on battlefields is black comedy. Indeed, it sometimes seems to those taking part that the very nature of war is God’s most terrible joke against the cruelty and folly of mankind.

I am currently writing a book about Vietnam, and yesterday found myself describing a moment in a 1968 fire-fight in which a U.S. Marine ran to the rear under fire, humping over his shoulder a buddy who had been hit, apparently oblivious of the fact that the man lacked his head.

That is the sort of thing that happens in wars, yet somehow did not make it into the final cut of The Longest Day, The Dirty Dozen or The Guns Of Navarone. Ah, yes — The Guns Of Navarone. Here is one of everybody’s all-time favourite war movies including mine, with Gregory Peck stitched into the cast as the 1961 obligatory Hollywood star, though his character in the original Alistair MacLean thriller was a New Zealander.


Smiling soldiers smoke while others fill up their canteens on board a train during the evacuation of Dunkirk in 1940


We can link this movie about a British team sent to cross occupied Greek territory and destroy the massive German gun emplacement with other gee-whizz war movies such as Where Eagles Dare.

In the latter, the most believable line comes from hero Richard Burton, who tells Clint Eastwood he is getting too old for death-defying stunts in Nazi castles.

MacLean got the germ of his idea for Navarone from a 1943 episode in the Aegean, when in a season of allied victories, Winston Churchill made a serious blunder: he personally insisted that the islands of Kos and Leros should be seized and held, though the Germans were still strong in the area.

In the ensuing real-life drama there were no big guns, only a few heroes, and no dramatic rescue: but tragically, six British battalions were written off. The Gregory Peck/David Niven movie, like Where Eagles Dare, makes terrific viewing for retarded adolescents like me, of whom there are many millions.


British troops in Dunkirk. The failed attempt to set up a base saw the Allied armies abandon huge amounts of equipment


But the stories are really Superman thrillers rather than ‘proper’ war films, because the stars perform feats against the stupid Nazis that no mortal men could match — no, not even the modern SAS on a good day.

Contrarily, one of the wonders of the Fifties black-and-white movies was that almost all told stories that were amazing, but true.

I have been studying World War II all my life, yet my jaw still drops in awe when contemplating what 617 Squadron, the Dambusters, did in May 1943 — flying their Lancasters level through darkness, 60 ft above the water of the Mohne and Eder reservoirs to drop Barnes Wallis’s brilliant bouncing mines.

And so, back to Dunkirk. It was, indeed, a miracle that the British Army was allowed to escape France — not through any Nazi expectations of a peace deal, but because the Fuhrer and his generals were overwhelmingly preoccupied with smashing the much larger French Army.


A group of soldiers look out at a burning ship .The historic events in 1940 have recently been turned into a blockbuster film


It was a second miracle, that the Channel sustained an almost glassy calm through the evacuation. And a third one that sailors, uniformed and civilian, braved the Luftwaffe’s dive-bombers to rescue the great bulk of the Army, albeit stripped of its weapons, vehicles and equipment, which took years to replace.

The British movie industry is now morbidly frightened of making films that might be thought jingoistic or glorifying war. This makes it all more heartening that the makers of Dunkirk have brought to the screen a great moment in our history.

Winston Churchill warned the House of Commons after Dunkirk: ‘Wars are not won by evacuations.’ But outright defeat was averted only by that marvellous rescue.

The film version has no meaningful dialogue, but that scarcely matters when the spectacle is the thing. The audience in the cinema where I saw Dunkirk burst into spontaneous applause when the ‘little ships’ first sailed across the screen. I hope I shall not be accused of party-pooping for pointing out that in reality it was the big ships, not the little ones, that carried home the overwhelming bulk of the 338,000 men rescued.

Of the 39 Royal Navy destroyers involved, most survived repeated shuttle trips, many of them by night. Just six were sunk, though 19 were damaged.

What was amazing about the real Dunkirk story was not how many British troops the Germans contrived to kill, but how relatively few — around 3,500. Total British dead in the whole 1940 French campaign were only 11,000, against almost five times that number of French troops.

But people will flock to see the Dunkirk movie not for real history, which it assuredly is not, but for an old-fashioned patriotic weepie spectacle, with whizzo special effects by land, sea and air — the sort of thing Steven Spielberg has been making for decades.

His films, of course, are enfolded in the Stars and Stripes. Now that we have one wrapped in the Union flag, it should be made compulsory viewing for all our schoolchildren, who grow up almost totally ignorant of what their great-grandads and great-grandmas did.

What next? In a 2017 in which we seem to be overdosing on gloom and doom, when we go the cinema we deserve to be cheered up. We need another brilliantly-shot ‘finest hour’ story, in which the British triumph in a just war. How about the Falklands War?

 
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Curious Cdn

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There was a hodge-podge of Canadians involved in the battle from all services. At one point, Canadian gunners WERE BEING LANDED as the beaches were being evacuated, as part of a hasty plan to establish a defensive fortress as a last ditch effort. They were withdrawn after a few days, though. I'm sure that the little story did not make it into the film, although it would have illustrated the confused tactical situation that was going on. The whole battle, from the British point of view, was "made up on the fly". ... almost literally.

After the evacuation, for a period, the British Army was in a sorry state as a good part of their modern equipment was left behind in France. For a few months right after the Battle of France and into the Battle of Britain, the First Canadian Division, which had not landed in France, was the only fully equipped and armed body left in England and had the Germans invaded (or been able to) they would have been put front and center in the line in front of them and likely would have been decimated.
 

Blackleaf

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There was a hodge-podge of Canadians involved in the battle from all services.

No Canadian units were involved at Dunkirk.

I'm sure that the little story did not make it into the film

And nor was the massive British involvement in D-Day - a British-planned-and-led operation - mentioned in Saving Private Ryan.

and had the Germans invaded (or been able to) they would have been put front and center in the line in front of them

As well as the 1.5 million-strong Home Guard, of course.
 

Curious Cdn

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No Canadian units were involved at Dunkirk.



And nor was the massive British involvement in D-Day - a British-planned-and-led operation - mentioned in Saving Private Ryan.



As well as the 1.5 million-strong Home Guard, of course.

No, that's right there were no specific Canadian units at Dunkirk but lots of Canadians serving with British forces were there. There were Canadian pilots killed in the air battle. Here is an interesting story about a young (at the time British) navy lieutenant who eventually became an Admiral in the RCN (1st CO of a ship that I was on, briefly)

http://www.thestar.com/entertainmen...need-to-know-about-the-battle-of-dunkirk.html


The British have all forgotten about Juno beach, as well.

The Home Guard was not a fully equipped regular army unit, which the 1st Canadian Division was.
 

Danbones

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Its interesting about how one Canadian pilot talks about making his way back to the beach after being shot down, and then spending three days there waiting for a ride out that was like "driving down the 401" to be evacuated.
(From the above Star link)

How the hell is being run out of town a TRIUMPH? I guess in the same way the British let the Germans know they were shipping arms on the Lusitania was a victory too.

Then Churchill becomes a founder of the unelected NAZI luvchild, the EU.
WoooHooo- VICTORY!
 
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Curious Cdn

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Its interesting about how one Canadian pilot talks about making his way back to the beach after being shot down, and then spending three days there waiting for a ride out that was like "driving down the 401" to be evacuated.
(From the above Star link)

How the hell is being run out of town a TRIUMPH?

"He who fight and run away, live to fight another day." Mao Tse Tung in his little Red Book
 

Blackleaf

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No, that's right there were no specific Canadian units at Dunkirk but lots of Canadians serving with British forces were there. There were Canadian pilots killed in the air battle. Here is an interesting story about a young (at the time British) navy lieutenant who eventually became an Admiral in the RCN (1st CO of a ship that I was on, briefly)

I suspect there were several nationalities fighting in the British and French armies.

Similarly, most of the "Canadians" at Vimy Ridge were actually British and yet the Canadians celebrate it as a Canadian victory.

The British have all forgotten about Juno beach, as well.

We certainly haven't forgotten that the Normandy Landings were a British-led-and-dominated operation.

The Home Guard was not a fully equipped regular army unit, which the 1st Canadian Division was.

The Home Guard was the unit that was set up to act as Britain's last line of defence in the event of a German invasion.
 

Danbones

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"He who fight and run away, live to fight another day." Mao Tse Tung in his little Red Book

While THAT is probably true.
TRIUMPH! means there is no other day
:)

Dunkirk was a poorly planned and well executed disaster.

Adolf Hitler - "Churchill is the very type of a corrupt journalist. There is not a worse prostitute in politics. He himself has written that it's unimaginable what can be done in war with the help of lies. He's an utterly amoral repulsive creature. I'm convinced that he has his place of refuge ready beyond the Atlantic. He obviously won't seek sanctuary in Canada. In Canada he'd be beaten up. He'll go to his friends the Yankees. As soon as this damnable winter is over, we'll remedy all that". - German dictator. Observation, Fenruary 18, 1942, to his guest at dinner, General Rommel - Hitler's Table Talk, Part 3, 1953
http://canadachannel.ca/canadianbirthdays/index.php/Canadian_Military_Quotations

Erwin Rommel - "Give me American supply lines, British planes, German officers and Canadian troops, and I can take over the world." - German General, World War II
http://canadachannel.ca/canadianbirthdays/index.php/Canadian_Military_Quotations
 

Curious Cdn

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Canada had the option of having British government, French culture and American know-how. Instead, we ended up with French government, American culture and British know-how.
 

Blackleaf

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Adolf Hitler - "Churchill is the very type of a corrupt journalist. There is not a worse prostitute in politics. He himself has written that it's unimaginable what can be done in war with the help of lies. He's an utterly amoral repulsive creature. I'm convinced that he has his place of refuge ready beyond the Atlantic. He obviously won't seek sanctuary in Canada. In Canada he'd be beaten up. He'll go to his friends the Yankees. As soon as this damnable winter is over, we'll remedy all that". - German dictator. Observation, Fenruary 18, 1942, to his guest at dinner, General Rommel - Hitler's Table Talk, Part 3, 1953
http://canadachannel.ca/canadianbirthdays/index.php/Canadian_Military_Quotations

How wrong Mr Hitler was.
 

lone wolf

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blah blah blah

Love to see the movie. Good thing Canada cared enough to arm and feed Britain after that ... at least some of them, anyhow.

No Canadian units were involved at Dunkirk.

Not as Canadian units anyhow....

The Brit obsession of listing "colonials" as Brits in times of honour and as the stuff one scrapes from his shoes any other time is very well known in Britain's need to toot its own horn
 

Blackleaf

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Love to see the movie. Good thing Canada cared enough to arm and feed Britain after that ... at least some of them, anyhow.

In 1940 Britain was a superpower, with the world's largest navy, the greatest aircraft production of any country and a small but uniquely mechanised army - more mechanised than the German Army. Her leaders were rightly confident in their ability to wage a devastating war of machines. The British Army did NOT lose nearly all its equipment at Dunkirk; it had enough spare capacity left at home for Churchill to send tanks to Egypt in August 1940. Millions worked in her munitions factories. Great Britain did not rely on any country for arms, and certainly not a small power like Canada.

As for food - British food production was not, contrary to belief, adversely affected by the war. Her citizens were less in danger of starving than those of any country on Earth. Her food imports during the war were the same as before it, and her own food production actually increased during the war. Contrary to belief, most food was not rationed and was available in great quantities.

Not as Canadian units anyhow....

The Brit obsession of listing "colonials" as Brits in times of honour and as the stuff one scrapes from his shoes any other time is very well known in Britain's need to toot its own horn

It's not quite on a par with the Canadians listing Vimy Ridge as a Canadian victory when most of the soldiers were actually British.
 

Bar Sinister

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It's not quite on a par with the Canadians listing Vimy Ridge as a Canadian victory when most of the soldiers were actually British.

Interesting that at Vimy there were 97,000 Canadians out of 170,00. I think that is more than half. And in the initial assault no British divisions participated. It is also interesting that the use of the Canadian Corps resulted in a victory after failed attempts by both the British and French armies.
 

Bar Sinister

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Canada had the option of having British government, French culture and American know-how. Instead, we ended up with French government, American culture and British know-how.

I'm not sure where that comment comes from. Canada has a parliamentary democracy based on British tradition and the only French culture I have noticed outside of Quebec is poutine. And so far as know-how is concerned I think we've done quite well for a nation with a relatively small population and industrial base.

List of Canadian inventions


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Canadian_inventions

While THAT is probably true.
TRIUMPH! means there is no other day
:)

Dunkirk was a poorly planned and well executed disaster.

You don't actually plan an evacuation; at least not one on the scale of Dunkirk. The evacuation was a hastily put together exercise that only succeeded because Hitler decided to halt the German advance and because the hastily put together plans to evacuate as many troops from the beaches succeeded beyond the wildest dreams of the people involved, both military and civilian.