The
old Lie; Dulce et Decorum est Pro patria mori."
(It is sweet and right to die for your country)
- Wilfred Owen
In Steven Spielberg's War Horse, you will not
find sexual addictions, murderous cults,
criminal sociopaths, not even a single vampire.
You will, however, find a compelling story of
one boy's incredible bonding with a
high-spirited half-thoroughbred who becomes
trapped in the nightmare of the First World War.
Based on the 1982 children's novel by Michael
Morpurgo and the 2007 stage play by Nick
Stafford and adapted for the screen by Lee Hall
and Richard Curtis, War Horse features the
acting debut of Jeremy Irvine as Albert
Narracott, a sensitive youth from Devonshire,
England who raises and trains the horse he names
Joey and, even after they are separated, never
gives up hope that they will one day be
reunited.
Superbly shot by cinematographer, Janusz
Kaminski, the film opens on a farm in Devon,
England. Albert (Irvine) is a farm boy whose
father Ted (Peter Mullan), a heavy drinker, buys
an Irish horse at an auction as a message to his
landlord (David Thewlis) who is also bidding.
The horse is described as “miraculous” because
of his speed, stamina, and physical beauty. The
price, however, is steep, and unless the horse
can plow the rocky fields, the family will lose
the horse as well as all of their property to
the avaricious landlord. No one including his
father and mother Rose (Emily Watson) believe
that it can be done, but Albert perseveres
through sheer determination and an uncanny
ability to communicate with Joey.
In 1914, however, when Britain declares war on
Germany, his father is forced to sell Joey to
the British cavalry. A broken hearted Albert
vows to enlist when he is of age to find Joey
and bring him home. Sent to France, Joey passes
through several hands including the kindhearted
English Captain Nicholls (Tom Hiddleston) who
vows to look after the horse. However, in a
scene of extraordinary power, hard charging
British soldiers attack a German camp, thinking
they will overcome them easily with a surprise
raid, but are met with heavy resistance from
German cannons and hundreds of men are killed
including Captain Nicholls.
After a brief stint pulling an ambulance, Joey
connects with a black stallion named Topthorn.
Both find a small degree of comfort in the home
of young Emilie (Celine Buckens) and her
grandfather (Niels Arestrup) but it is short
lived. Emilie is captured while riding Joey and
he and the stallion are taken away by German
soldiers. In another powerful sequence, when
Joey is speeding away from a danger zone, he is
cornered by a German tank but makes his escape
by leaping over the tank. Sadly, however, he is
caught in a barbed wire fence between the
British and German trenches and becomes
hopelessly entangled until a German with a wire
cutter comes forward to help a British soldier
free the suffering horse.
Underlined by the soaring tones of John Williams
score, War Horse can at times be saccharine,
manipulative, and predictable, yet it is
ultimately irresistible and a film that connects
us to our essential humanity, evoking a simpler
time when values were more important than box
office and where entire families could watch a
film together. Like the donkey in Bresson's Au
hazard Balthazar, the fictional horse stands as
a symbol for the purity and innocence we have
lost, and serves to remind us that real horses
have been brutalized in wars throughout history
from Alexander the Great to the 20th century,
and continue to suffer today from those who
profit from their sacrifice.
GRADE: A-