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Hart's
War
isn't really the film its trailer implies it to be.
It's more of a courtroom drama than an action flick, and
anyone who assumes Bruce Willis is playing the titular Hart
would be wrong, even though his is the only name listed above
the title (and his face completely dominates the poster, too).
Victims of War's treacherous bait-and-switch
advertising will instead be treated to an oddball amalgamation
of A Few Good Men, Victory, Men of Honor
and Hogan's Heroes (it's not a comedy, though there is a
scene where guys light their farts).
War
is set in late 1944 and its main character, no matter what the
poster wants you to believe, is Lieutenant Tommy Hart (Colin
Farrell, American Outlaws), a second-year law student
from Yale and son of a U.S. Senator who arranged a cushy desk
job for his son while the children of unconnected men battle the
Nazis mano a mano. Like
all post-Saving Private Ryan films about World War II,
War is completely gritty and washed out, with drab blues and
grays juxtaposed against white snow, which only makes the blood
that much more dramatic when it's blown out of someone's skull,
which happens when Hart and a Colonel are ambushed by Germans
posing as American soldiers.
Before
you know it, Hart, like Behind Enemy Lines' Chris
Burnett, is being chased through the woods and lands face-down
in a mass grave. Unlike
Burnett, however, Hart is captured, interrogated by a Nazi
officer and thrown on a train that takes him to a POW camp in
Belgium (War was shot in Prague). Even though he's a Lieutenant, Hart is forced to live in a
barracks with the regular enlisted men when Colonel William
McNamara (Willis, Bandits) tells him there's no more room
in the officers' inn.
The
first meeting between Hart and fourth-generation West Point grad
McNamara is somewhat intriguing, with Rachel Portman's (Chocolat)
music intimating that one is totally fucking with the other,
though we don't ultimately learn who until the last reel.
But at least we find out.
Viewers never really get an insight into what makes
McNamara or his Nazi counterpart, SS Major Wilhelm Visser
(Marcel Iures, The Peacemaker), operate the way they do.
Theirs is a strange relationship of mutual admiration and
complete hatred.
The
bulk of War focuses on the arrival of two Tuskegee airmen
who, like Hart, are officers but relegated to the barracks of
the enlisted men. As
you might imagine, this doesn't go over too well with the white
soldiers (the Armed Services were still segregated back then).
Long story short, one of the black soldiers (Vicellous
Reon Shannon, The Hurricane) is killed and the other, one
Lieutenant Lincoln Scott (Terrence Dashon Howard, Glitter), is accused of murdering one of his
racist bunkmates. Instead
of being executed by the Nazis, McNamara talks Visser into
holding a military tribunal to decide Scott's fate.
Hart is chosen to defend the accused.
So
that's where the courtroom thing enters into the story, though War
has enough sense to stop short of getting McNamara on the stand
and shouting, "You can't handle the truth!" even
though it's pretty clear he's covering something up.
War's heavy-handed message clumsily parallels the
Holocaust with America's own racial hatred (after all, what's
wrong with roasting a Jew or two when you're lynching black kids
back home?).
Gregory
Hoblit is a slick director, but I like it much better when he
sticks to the creepy and the supernatural (like Primal Fear,
Fallen and Frequency). He's capable of getting
good performances from people I don't usually hold in high
esteem, and War isn't much of an exception (there isn't
anyone I really disliked in the cast).
My problem was more with the story, which was based on
John Katzenbach's novel and adapted by Billy Ray (Volcano)
and – dig this – Terry George, who usually pens films about
Northern Ireland and their Catholic vs. Protestant battles.
On the plus side, War does feature Nazis who speak
actual German, instead of saddling them with a bad Colonel Klink
accent.
| 2:05
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for
some strong war violence and language |
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