obsession boyfriend i'm psyched girl crush i'm dreading enemy

(need an explanation?)

advertisements





when in Stratford-upon-Avon, U.K., I stay at
Adelphi Guest House




Defiance (review)

Robin Hoodskis

Just when you think that surely, by now -- especially after this year of nonstop Nazi movies! -- we’ve heard every story to come out of the Holocaust, along comes yet another new one. Another true one. And another one that’s all about the limits to which people get pushed -- and to which we push ourselves -- in extreme situations. Yea for us, that we find ways to survive the seemingly unsurvivable. Yea for us, that we’ve been able to find the humanity in the middle of one of the worst things humans have ever done to one another. But, man, what a way to learn this lesson... and to keep learning it over and over again in the stories we tell one another.

(more below the ad... scroll down...)

I’m not saying, “Enough with the Nazi movies.” I’m saying, “Enough for the crimes against humanity.” Note to whomever is in charge: We’ve gotten the message, so you can lay off now. I mean, look at how peaceful the world has been since World War II!

That Defiance is not relentlessly grim even as it’s, you know, relentlessly grim is a credit to director Edward Zwick, whose track record on intense storytelling ranges from the starkly brutal (the 1983 TV movie Special Bulletin, about a nuclear terrorist attack on American soil) to the laughably off-key (2003’s The Last Samurai). Here, though, in the tale of three roguish brothers who lead a band of Jews in hiding in the forests of Belorussia as the Nazis are rounding people up for the camps, there isn’t a lick of phony sentimentality, not a moment that rings false. It even manages to make us feel as if we haven’t seen much of this before, even though we have.

Because while the details may be relatively original to Hollywood moviemaking, the structure and the Hollywoodized template of the tale are pretty standard. That isn’t always a bad thing. Hollywood makes it easy to decry Hollywood filmmaking, but every once in a while a studio film reminds us why studios films got so popular in the first place: they can be rousing and inspiring entertainments that feel archetypal rather than clichéd. “Standard” doesn’t just mean ordinary or average -- it can also signify the pinnacle of how something can be done.

So if it’s a little bit Robin Hood-ish when one of the heroic Bielski brothers, Asael (Jamie Bell: Jumper, King Kong), says, “We know these woods. They’ll never find us in here,” well, that’s just fine. What he and his brothers, Tuvia (Daniel Craig: Quantum of Solace, The Golden Compass) and Zus (Liev Schreiber: Love in the Time of Cholera, The Painted Veil), are stealing from the powerful Nazis are people -- Jews -- and what they are giving the “poor” is themselves, not only their own lives but a sense of hope and a way to carry on in a terrible situation. The track of where their story goes is inevitable, even if it doesn’t always feel that way. Of course their refuge deep in the dense forests cannot be safe forever from such persistent pursuit, and we know that someone had to survive this horror to tell the tale -- the movie is based on Nechama Tec’s nonfiction book Defiance: The Bielski Partisans [Amazon U.S.] [Amazon U.K.] -- but there are more than a few intense moments when it’s hard to see how...

It’s those details -- which Zwick lavishes over in a way that is both loving, to ensure their richness, and sparse, to avoid bringing the plot to a standstill -- that make the story sing. Some are not unfamiliar: how one copes with traitors and collaborators, how one struggles not to become like the monstrous enemy one is fighting, how life goes on even amid deprivation, sickness, and ednless fear. Others are more surprising: Craig navigates Tuvia through a landmine of personality: he’s a petty criminal used to people treating him like dirt but comes into his own as a natural leader; he’s a hard man who’s an unexpected soft touch, one who cannot turn away anyone who needs help; and yet there comes a moment when you begin to wonder whether Tuvia hasn’t gone as soft as a man like him can go, and then: oof! The film -- and Craig -- smack you across the face.

Some of the details are bittersweet: two brainy types, a teacher and a publisher, cheerfully argue politics and philosophy even as they engage in what is probably the most physical work they’ve even done in their lives. (It takes a lot of hands to build a village from scratch.) Most of the details are bitter; a rabbi in a Nazi ghetto who rejects Tuvia’s offer of escape, saying, “We’re waiting for god”; a moment when Schreiber’s Zus is so full of grief that what he does feels so spontaneous that I had to wonder whether he improvised it... and if he did, he’s a far more dangerous actor than I’ve ever given him credit for. (And if he didn’t, then he’s only proven, again, how unforced his forceful naturalness is.)

But bitter is not the feeling Defiance leaves you with in the end. It’s hopefulness, even as we can’t forget that we haven’t learned our lessons from such events at all.

[buy at Amazon (Region 1)]     [buy at Amazon (Region 2)]

viewed at a private screening with an audience of critics
rated R for violence and language
official site | IMDB | trailer | more reviews at MRQE
see everything else I've got on: Defiance
(links here are good for finding recent posts, but will not be fully functional till I finish tagging 11 years worth of reviews and blog entries; I'll post a notice when tagging is done)
(more below the ad... scroll down...)



comments

I was only interested in seeing two of the variety of Nazi films that were out for the holiday season, so I saw this one over New Years. As I was walking out of the theater behind a woman and her mother, I overhead the mother commenting that the next time someone told her the all the Jews just went to the camps and died, she was going to tell them differently. So, I think maybe if the film accomplished even that much, it was a success.

Wow... what a negative attitude in writing this review. It's one thing to detail the movie's shortcomings, but yet another to be pessimistic in every aspect (the movie, hollywood, the storyline, the actors, life in general...).

Not sure if I can trust a review with such a dark cloud hanging over its reviewer.

I admit I'm pretty down on crimes against humanity, which could be construed as a negative, I guess...

Other than that, though, I'm at a total loss to figure out that you mean, Dave. Can you explain what the "dark cloud" hanging over me is?

Also, can you point out one example of how I'm pessimistic about, oh, the actors (or anything else)? And maybe one aspect of "life in general" that I'm down on?

post a comment

who I am


I'm MaryAnn Johanson: writer and ponderer in New York City who drinks too much wine and thinks way too much about such inconsequences as movies, TV, books, and the meaning of life.
[email me]
[become a Facebook fan]
[visit my personal Facebook page]
[follow me on Twitter]
[friend me on MySpace]

FlickFilosopher.com is available on Kindle

• contributor, Film.com
• member, International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences
• visit my scratchpad blog, MaryAnnJohanson.com
• read my Doctor Who fan fiction

photo by David Speranza

(postings feed)


top critic on Movie Review Query Engine


as seen on Rotten Tomatoes


member, Online Film Critics Society


member, Alliance of Women Film Journalists

Add to Technorati Favorites

monthly archives

recent screenings and hot movies

just opened (U.S.)
red for no The Twilight Saga: New Moon
yellow for maybe Planet 51
not viewed by me The Blind Side [trailer]
not viewed by me Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans [trailer]
yellow for maybe Broken Embraces
green for go Red Cliff [trailer]
yellow for maybe The Missing Person [trailer]
green for go Precious (expanding)
green for go Fantastic Mr. Fox (expanding)
just opened (U.K.)
red for no The Twilight Saga: New Moon
green for go A Serious Man
green for go The Informant!
box office top 5 (U.S.)
yellow for maybe 2012
red for no A Christmas Carol
green for go Precious
green for go The Men Who Stare at Goats
yellow for maybe Michael Jackson's This Is It
top limited releases (U.S.)
green for go Precious
red for no The Boondock Saints II: All Saints Day
green for go An Education
green for go A Serious Man
yellow for maybe Coco Before Chanel
box office top 5 (U.K.)
yellow for maybe 2012
red for no A Christmas Carol
not viewed by me Harry Brown
green for go Up
green for go The Men Who Stare at Goats
coming soon (U.S./U.K.)
red for no The Loss of a Teardrop Diamond
yellow for maybe Serious Moonlight [trailer]
yellow for maybe A Single Man [trailer]
green for go Everybody's Fine [trailer]
red for no The Strip
green for go The Private Lives of Pippa Lee [trailer]
green for go The Young Victoria [trailer]
green for go Creation [trailer]
green for go The Road [trailer]
green for go The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus [trailer]
other current flicks (U.S./U.K.)
green for go Amelia
red for no Antichrist [trailer]
red for no Astro Boy
yellow for maybe The Box
green for go The Boys Are Back
green for go Bright Star
green for go Capitalism: A Love Story [trailer]
yellow for maybe Cirque du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant
yellow for maybe Collapse
red for no Couples Retreat
green for go Creation [trailer]
green for go The Damned United
green for go An Education
green for go Five Minutes of Heaven
yellow for maybe The Fourth Kind
red for no Gentlemen Broncos [trailer]
green for go The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus [trailer]
green for go The Invention of Lying
red for no Jennifer's Body
green for go The Messenger [trailer]
green for go Ong Bak 2: The Beginning
yellow for maybe Paranormal Activity
red for no Pirate Radio (aka The Boat That Rocked)
yellow for maybe A Single Man [trailer]
yellow for maybe Where the Wild Things Are
red for no Whiteout
red for no Women in Trouble
green for go Zombieland

2009 screening log

new on dvd

11.17 (Region 1)
green for go Star Trek [buy]
green for go Humpday [buy]
green for go Bruno [buy]
green for go Is Anybody There? [buy]
yellow for maybe The Limits of Control [buy]
yellow for maybe My Sister's Keeper [buy]
yellow for maybe How to Be [buy]
green for go Farscape: The Complete Series [buy]
green for go Gone with the Wind: 70th Anniversary Ultimate Collector's Edition [buy]
(complete list of this week's new releases at Amazon U.S.)

11.16 (Region 2)
green for go Star Trek [buy]
green for go Moon [buy]
green for go Sunshine Cleaning [buy]
yellow for maybe Four Christmases [buy]
yellow for maybe Tyson [buy]
green for go An Evening with John Barrowman [buy]
green for go Doctor Who: The Key to Time [buy]
green for go South Park: Christmas Time in South Park [buy]
green for go Star Trek Trilogy [buy]
green for go Star Trek: The Next Generation Movie Collection [buy]
green for go Star Trek: Films 1-10 Remastered Special Edition [buy]
yellow for maybe Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles Season 2 [buy]
(complete list of this week's new releases at Amazon U.K.)

11.10 (Region 1)
green for go Up [buy]
red for no The Ugly Truth [buy]
green for go The Sarah Jane Adventures: The Complete Second Season [buy]
green for go Ink [buy]
(complete list of this week's new releases at Amazon U.S.)

11.09 (Region 2)
green for go Bruno [buy]
yellow for maybe The Age of Stupid [buy]
red for no Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian [buy]
green for go The Sarah Jane Adventures: The Complete Second Season [buy]
green for go All Creatures Great and Small: Christmas Specials [buy]
(complete list of this week's new releases at Amazon U.K.)

11.03 (Region 1)
green for go The Taking of Pelham 123 [buy]
green for go Thicker Than Water: The Vampire Diaries Part 1 [buy]
yellow for maybe Food, Inc. [buy]
red for no G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra [buy]
red for no Aliens in the Attic [buy]
red for no I Love You, Beth Cooper [buy]
green for go North by Northwest (50th Anniversary Edition) [buy]
green for go Doctor Who: The War Games [buy]
green for go Doctor Who: The Black Guardian Trilogy [buy]
green for go National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation (Ultimate Collector's Edition) [buy]
green for go Mission: Impossible: Complete Series [buy]
(complete list of this week's new releases at Amazon U.S.)

11.02 (Region 2)
green for go Public Enemies [buy]
yellow for maybe Last Chance Harvey [buy]
red for no Year One [buy]
red for no Blood: The Last Vampire [buy]
green for go Wallace and Gromit: The Complete Collection [buy]
(complete list of this week's new releases at Amazon U.K.)

my book (Amazon U.S.)

my book (Amazon U.K.)

advertisements

search

Google
flickfilosopher.com
web