10/10
"The stretcher-bearers will come once it gets dark,I have to wait for nightfall without losing consciousness."
2 May 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Reading Empire magazine in 2014, a detailed review for Wooden Crosses stood out and stuck in my memory,due to the title sounding so different to all the slick blockbusters reviewed in the DVD/Blu-Ray section of the magazine. Discovering auteur film maker Raymond Bernard over the following years,a poll on ICM for the best films of 1932, led to me finally placing down a cross.

View on the film:

One of two titles they have put out (up to now) from the film maker,Masters of Cinema present a superb transfer, with the image retaining the original grain, whilst remaining smooth during more rapid camera moves,and the layered soundtrack being kept in tact.

Holding a bond with Pathe studio head Bernard Natan over examining war on film "In such a way to get people to hate and despise it." Co-writer/(with André Lang) directing auteur Raymond Bernard & cinematographers René Ribault and Jules Kruger (who'd reunite with Bernard on Les Miserables (1934)) go to the front line with ground-breaking techniques. Filmed at real No Mans Land locations (Bernard said in an interview that bodies of WWI soldiers were found as they dug trenches for the production) Bernard makes the heavy cameras of the era move with an astonishing fluidness,in Bernard targeting an atmosphere of documentary rawness,from the scatter-gun whip-pans and tracking shots treading along the unfolding horror on the battle fields.

Continuing to build on his recurring visual theme of shots drenched in long,imposing shadows, (which would continue being explored in his titles such as the Film Noir Maya (1949-also reviewed) Bernard crawls the viewer over ever inch fought for on No Man's Land with a breathtaking battle set entirely at night time,lit by the lone flares cast across the sky and the flickering of flames from the pounding guns. Blowing out countless microphones over attempts to get "The real sound of war" , Bernard finally hit his target via lining the microphones in various levels of distances from the fired weapons, create a distinctive wave sound design, where the reverberating jolt of gun fires ring out from the battlefields,and shakes the walls of the trenches. Attempting to find shelter in a grave yard, Bernard and Lang's adaptation of Roland Dorgeles takes a deeply thoughtful, humanist touch to the screenplay, with all the classes deep in the trenches being treated as equals, all held together by the loss of hope and humanity that sings out across the No Man's Land of wooden crosses.
8 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed