Posted on 12/24/2017 12:52:30 PM PST by beaversmom
Words matter. Thats one of the key messages of Darkest Hour, in which Gary Oldman embodies fiercely and memorably the legendary Winston Churchill, who rallied his country with soaring oratory when Britains very survival was at stake.
But the same man who uttered such indelible phrases as I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears and sweat and many others was also a human being, the film argues, with fears and doubts and insecurities and flaws. Just be yourself, Churchills wife, Clementine (a briskly effective Kristin Scott Thomas) advises him as he heads off, full of jitters, to meet the king and become the wartime prime minister. Later, he raises a glass with Clementine, with a fervent wish: Heres to not buggering it up.
Buggering it up was certainly a risk both for Churchill, and for Oldman or any actor attempting to embody the great man. Its hard enough to portray a revered real-life figure and harder yet with such a larger-than-life persona, physically and otherwise. It wont be a surprise to fans of the skilled Oldman that he avoids mimicry or caricature, and its an even better treat that hes able to so adeptly balance conviction with doubt, courage with fear, and gravity with humor. (Kudos are due as well to the superb makeup by Kazuhiro Tsuji, jowls and all.)
Darkest Hour, directed by Joe Wright and written by Anthony McCarten, focuses on one month in 1940 that saw Churchill rise to office and face down his political foes and a wary British monarch as he navigated the threat of looming war against Adolf Hitlers forces. Though Wright is known for his sweeping filmmaking in another war film, Atonement, here he focuses not on the beaches of Dunkirk but on dimly lit interiors like the underground war rooms at Westminster Palace, the halls of Parliament, and Churchills own bedroom.
The film is, in a sense, a companion piece by way of timing, at least to Christopher Nolans Dunkirk, released in the summer. While Nolan focused on the action, Wright focuses on the talk specifically how Churchill, in the words of one frustrated opponent, mobilized the English language and sent it into battle.
He wasnt the first choice to be prime minister not of his party, and certainly not of a skeptical King George VI (an excellent Ben Mendelsohn). But Parliament, as we learn at the beginning of the film, had lost confidence in the ailing Neville Chamberlain, and Churchill was a compromise solution.
He enters office as France and Belgium are on the brink of falling to the Nazis, and most of the British Army is stranded at Dunkirk. The new prime minister is forced to make an agonizing decision: Try to negotiate a dubious peace, as Chamberlain desired, or fight and risk the deaths of a generation of young British men. Hes hated by Chamberlain and his sidekick, Lord Halifax, and doubted by the king, who (initially) finds him scary and unpredictable.
Its fun to watch the lunch meeting between the restrained king and Churchill, a man of great appetites and a famous thirst. When the king asks how he can drink during the day, the prime minister replies: Practice.
There are many such moments of humor, including when Churchill first meets his new young secretary, Elizabeth Layton (Lily James), and inadvertently flashes his privates under his nightshirt. Or when he warns her as he exits the shower: Im coming out in a state of nature! Hes also shown on the toilet, shouting out that he cannot speak to the Lord Privy Seal because he is sealed on The Privy.
Despite such comic moments, which Oldman attacks with gusto, the films mood is urgent and dire. The United States cannot help because of neutrality agreements; in a dispiriting phone call with Franklin D. Roosevelt, the U.S. president notes: It must be late there. Churchill replies: In more ways than you can possibly know.
Ultimately as we all know Churchill decides to fight on, and to declare We will never surrender. What gets him there? Partly, a ride on the London Underground. The prime minister decides to ditch his aides and take the Tube to Westminster, and on the way, to chat with some commonfolk. To a person, they agree with him that the country must never surrender to the forces of evil.
There are two problems with this scene. First, its rather corny. The second is that it never happened. The filmmakers do warn that some material has been fictionalized. But some may be disappointed to learn that one of the most pivotal scenes in the film was manufactured.
Oldmans performance, though, which has launched him to the forefront of awards season chatter, triumphs over any such qualms. The last few years have seen a number of notable Churchill interpretations. Oldman has set the bar higher still.
Oldman one of my favorites. Looking forward to this film.
Yep....
The leftwing NAZI Socialists were allies with the leftwing Russian Communists...until the German Socialist dicktator got greedy and wanted Russia, too.
Doug Urbanski?
Hollywood agent.
Yes! You got it.
No, technically they were still allies until a week later. Stalin stayed in bed for a week.
Indeed.
A great movie is “Stalin” with Robert Duval.
There’s a great scene when the Nazis are invading, and Voroshilov, tells Stalin directly that it was Stalin’s fault.
Now that took balls.......and Voroshilov lived to tell the tale.
Oldman is one of the greatest actors of our generation.
Yes, he’s that good.
And Oldman is no liberal.
“...Winston Churchill, who rallied his country with soaring oratory when Britains very survival was at stake.”
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
.
Britain’s very survival is at greater peril right now with all the muzzies and there is no Churchill anywhere in sight.
Poor, poor Britain.
When the UK becomes officially a Muslim country, all vestiges of it’s Anglican history will be ersased. Pity, that.
I just saw it this afternoon. It is a great movie.
Oh, and Nick, we were definitely on the menu for the mid-1940's, once all of Europe to the Urals was secure and the survivors hard at work for the Reich. The Japanese (and the Russian winter) disrupted the plan.
Its amazing how many are ignorant about that.
Nigel Farage is no PM and the one they do have is about to renege on Brexit and neither know how to handle the muzzie problem
Nigel Farage is no PM and the one they do have is about to renege on Brexit and neither know how to handle the muzzie problem.
Britain IS in their darkest hour.
So it was before he colluded?
We saw it yesterday!
AWESOME!!!!....OUTSTANDING!!!!!!
Thanks for those links.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.