Sunday, January 24, 2016

The Top 15 War Films That Are Not Just About Combat


The first movie that won an Oscar was the 1929 war epic Wings, about two American pilots in World War I, and Howard Hughes famously spent $4 million (almost $60 million in today’s money) to bring to life, in chilling detail, his version of the airborne death and destruction of the Great War. Just a year later, Director Lewis Milestone’s All Quiet on the Western Front, in examining the devastating toll taken on humans subjected to relentless violence and grief on the battlefield, also helped revolutionize how movies and plots were created. Many young actors and directors have had big breaks or careers rejuvenated by war pictures which gave audiences front row seats to the smoke, stress and gut-wrenching loss of conflict. However, most war films have relied on nonstop combat sequences over characters to carry the story lines, and while many of these are great pictures and deserve to be honored, for this list I have chosen memorable movies that, in a departure from typical war plots, have little or no combat while still making powerful wartime statements.    

15. The Great Escape, released in 1963, set in World War II                              
Considered one of the best war films in general, The Great Escape follows the true story of a group of American and British prisoners inside the German prison of Stalag Luft III as they try to figure a way to get all 250 captives out in one mass escape. Starring Steve McQueen, James Garner and Richard Attenborough, among others, the movie takes place entirely in the prison, except for the dramatic ending, and never shows major combat.   


14. Conspiracy, released in 2001, set in World War II
While not having a theatrical run, Conspiracy was released by HBO in 2001. At just over 90 minutes, it is one of the shortest movies on this list, one of the most haunting, and its brevity allows it to take place in real time. The conspiracy in question was a real meeting of over a dozen high ranking Nazi leaders, portrayed by actors like Kenneth Branagh, Stanley Tucci and Colin Firth, as they lay out the strategy for what would become the Holocaust, and defeat the last efforts at any official opposition.

13. War Horse, released in 2011, set in World War I
Steven Spielberg’s first war film since Saving Private Ryan, War Horse looks at World War I through the eyes of a horse who starts the war in the cavalry and ends the war pulling heavy cannons behind the lines. Unlike some of Spielberg’s other work like Munich, and although it has some battlefield settings, there does not appear to be any overriding political message to it, merely highlighting the horror of war on people and animals.


12. Hotel Rwanda, released in 2004, set in the 1994 Rwandan Genocide
The horrifying events in Rwanda in 1994 when the long oppressed Hutus rose up and began mass killings of the ruling Tutsis which left over half a million people dead in just three months, have received surprisingly little attention from Hollywood since they occurred. One film that has attempted to document these events is Hotel Rwanda, which follows the true story of Paul Rusesabagina, manager of an upscale hotel, who bravely threw open its doors to refugees fleeing the genocide. Rusesabagina, played by Don Cheadle, stays in the hotel, watching over the people. While some violence is shown toward the end, it does not dominate the film.     

11. The Pianist, released in 2002, set in World War II
Directed by the controversial Roman Polanski, this 2002 film follows the real life story of Wladyslaw Szpilman, a Jewish musician from Poland who finds his life brought to screeching halt when the German army invades his country in 1939. As Szpilman flees underground for most of the movie, combat does occur around him, but he does not take part in it.




10. 1776, released in 1972, set in the Revolutionary War
This delightful Broadway musical follows the political debate, writing and ultimate passage of the Declaration of Independence in July in 1776. It tells the story from the viewpoint of John Adams, Ben Franklin and Thomas Jefferson. Taking place almost entirely inside Philadelphia’s Freedom Hall, no combat is ever shown, though it is discussed through letters and song. 




9. Amen, released in 2002, set in World War II
A little known German movie from 2002, Amen follows the interesting story of Kurt Gerstein, a low ranking German SS officer responsible for improving hygiene for the men in the field. However, as the war continues, Gerstein finds out that his services are being used to supply gas to the concentration camps. Horrified by what he sees, the film shifts to what happens when word from Gerstein reaches the Vatican and Pope Pius XII. Based on the 1963 play The Deputy by Rolf Hochhuth and Gerstein’s real story, the movie takes place in multiple locations over several years, but it does not depict any combat. It also deserves special credit for discussing a little known area of the war – the infamous T-4 Program.

8. Twelve O’clock High, released in 1949, set in World War II
A classic war film and one of the highlights of Gregory Peck’s long career. The film follows General Frank Savage, a young officer placed in charge of the VIII Bomber Command. The struggling VIII has a poor bombing record and low morale. Through brutal discipline, Savage remolds them into one the most feared units in the air. Like most movies that came out in the immediate years after the war, Twelve O'clock High may have had a low budget and been unable to show aerial combat for very long. For this reason, the single combat scene that is shown uses stock film from the war and almost the whole film takes place at an airbase in Britain.

7. Downfall, released in 2004, set in World War II
Often made fun of for the fact that it has a Hitler rant scene, Downfall is still one of the most accurate films made to date. It follows Traudl Junge, Hitler’s personal secretary, as she and Hitler are forced to flee into a massive bunker when the Soviet Red Army surrounds Berlin and moves in for the final assault. While street fighting is shown at some points in the film, Downfall is chiefly about the men and women in the bunker and how they are forced to ready themselves for the unknown. Hitler, played brilliantly by Bruno Ganz, is not shown as a drooling monster, but his mental instability and declining grasp of reality is deftly portrayed.    

6. Das Boot, released in 1981, set in World War II
At over three hours, Das Boot follows the crew aboard the German submarine U-96 early in 1941 as they go out into Atlantic in search of British merchant ships to sink. There are long scenes of depth charges raining down on the crew and one British ship is sunk, but this is not a film about combat. It is more about a diverse group of men thrown together in claustrophobic conditions and how each simply tries to carry on their lives as the war rages on above them. No wonder some called the film, “So good, you will root for the Germans.”

5. Gone with the Wind, released in 1939, set in the Civil War
In this sweeping adaptation of Margaret Mitchell’s classic novel, Scarlett O'Hara, a southern belle and daughter of a planter, finds herself caught up in the storm of the American Civil War. Most of the film being set in wartime Atlanta, no scenes of battle are shown except for when the city is spectacularly burned by the retreating Confederate Army, and even then no army action is shown. While Scarlett herself shoots a Union soldier, the movie is more about how strong willed women survived as their world was being destroyed around them.   

4. Casablanca, released in 1942, set in World War II
Among the first films to depict life during a war which was still going on at the time, Casablanca is about American expatriate Rick Blaine, played by Humphrey Bogart, who runs a bar and semi-secret gambling club in Nazi occupied Casablanca. Finding himself helping two underground rebels escape back to Europe, Rick is forced to outwit the Nazis and make peace with his former girlfriend, Ilsa Lund, played by Ingrid Bergman.



3. Lincoln, released in 2012, set in the Civil War
Among the very best films made by Steven Spielberg in recent years and even better than War Horse or Saving Private Ryan, this movie focuses on President Abraham Lincoln as he pushes, cajoles and flat out bribes members of Congress to pass the Thirteenth Amendment banning slavery throughout the United States. While a brief combat sequence is shown at the beginning, no other military action happens as it is mostly set in the House of Representatives. The obvious high point of the movie is Daniel Day Lewis, who turns in an Academy Award winning performance as the title character.

2. Command Decision, released in1948, set in World War II

Very similar to Twelve O'clock High in terms of structure and characters, the performances and plot are stronger. The story centers on General K.C. "Casey" Dennis, in an exceptional performance by Clark Gable as commander of the 5th Bomber Division, and is based off a play of the same name. While Savage personally led the bombing raids in Twelve O'clock High, Dennis is forced to remain at the base as much younger men take off for dangerous missions deep inside Germany. The main conflict comes as Dennis knows that he is sending boys to their deaths, but is convinced that if he does not, the war will simply go on and get even worse. In the end, what makes Command Decision great is the blunt discussion of what it is to lead people in wartime and how hard the decisions are those who are not in battle.    

1. The Best Years of Our Lives, released in 1946, set in World War II

Filmed immediately after the end of World War II, The Best Years of Our Lives centers on men returning from Europe and the Pacific who attempt to resume lives they find no longer exist.  The main characters, a sergeant, a B-17 pilot and a double amputee Navy sailor, each have different experiences that are equally disturbing and unexpected. The pilot suffers post-traumatic stress, the sergeant finds his wife and children are strangers with strange ideas, and the sailor must adjust to a new life with awkward prosthetic arms. All of the characters are skillfully written and portrayed compassionately and the film was, and still remains, a sober and realistic observation of post-war life that appealed to millions of people all over the world who were recovering from the war themselves.

As war continues to fascinate and horrify the public, Hollywood will continue to produce stories revolving around war. Some of these will become classics while others were will be seen as shallow political hit pieces. But it is also hoped that directors and writers will continue to make films that focus on the quieter and less well known sides of war.