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Paths of Gory., 14 August 2009
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Author:
dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
"When it comes to dying for your country, it's better not to die at
all." --Paul (Lewis Ayres), ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT.
The quote from ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT may be misconstrued. If
there really was such a thing as "dying for your country," it would be
stupid enough, but no one ever really dies for their country - they die
to appease the small-penis insecurities and greed of the low, gutless
swine who ordered them into war.
From the book by Humphrey Cobb, Stanley Kubrick directs PATHS OF GLORY
- an outraged, frustrated scream against the duplicity, mendacity,
idiocy, inhumaneness and ingloriousness of war.
For two years, a platoon of WWI French soldiers have been fighting
futilely against Germans in trench warfare. Led by Colonel Dax (Kirk
Douglas), they are ordered to storm a German fortification by their
cowardly commanders, General Broulard (Adolphe Menjou) and General
Mireau (George Macready, who looks and acts ominously like Dick
Cheney). The attack is a failure, but the Generals - who think nothing
of losing "51-percent casualties for the sake of moving their line
ahead," refuse to acknowledge the impossibility of success or their own
lack of strategy and stupidity, and scapegoat three men from Dax's
platoon to be tried and executed for cowardice, as the reason for the
failure.
Outraged at the injustice, Dax does all he can to stay the execution,
meeting with Broulard and Mireau to plead not just clemency, but to
avoid descent into the madness of arbitrary slaughter of their own men
simply for the Generals to save face; further, Dax acts as legal
counsel for the doomed men. All in vain. High command will have its
blood - from the enemy's side, or their own.
Cobb's tale has not dated in half a century, its message, its impact,
its depiction of low men in high places. Though PATHS depicts French
officers heartlessly regarding their men as cannon fodder, the same
attitude is adopted by every single faction that enters into war - the
high commanders seeing their militia as statistics and the officers
closer to the ranks becoming greater idealists, like Dax. (But who am I
to talk? The closest I've come to trench warfare is taking cover behind
rows of school desks and launching lethal shoes at my enemies before
the teacher arrived and sent us all to the principal.)
For its unafraid camera (Kubrick pans through rows of trench gutters,
over shattered bodies, through glutting mud and ear-damaging explosions
- all in stark black and white) and fearless unpatriotic concepts
(Mireau orders his own men fired upon to get them out of the trenches,
Dax goes hell-bent insubordinate against his superiors to save his
men), PATHS inspires outrage, but could it have been all that hard for
Americans and Brits to enact these foreign roles so convincingly and
make the Froggies look like buttered croissants? Even though Kubrick
portrays war as ludicrous on every level, from the fighting to the
politics, we are left with the image of the French being ludicrous. So
ludicrous that the French banned PATHS OF GLORY in France until 1975.
But the message is still damning in its intensity. PATHS is so
disturbing and cloying that the irony of its title is like a
sledgehammer to the spine - unlike almost every other war movie
existent, from then to now, we clearly see there IS no "glory" in war.
And "war" these days covers every underhanded business decision (like
George W. Bush's ignominious Iraq defeat) and political and religious
skirmish (from monks in Myanmar to Iranian elections). And the very
same contradictory insanities in PATHS OF GLORY continue right now: The
Geneva Convention clearly delineates torture as a war crime (Article
17, Article 130, and others from 1949) - yet Bush tortures in the name
of America and remains unconvicted, he jails soldiers who refuse to
torture for their disobedience to his dictatorship, then jails
scapegoats who DID torture to gain political capital; while Barack
Obama allows CIA operatives who tortured to remain free, citing their
excuse ("just following orders") as valid, even though this same excuse
incarcerated those at Nuremberg...
There is no Hollywood Eleventh Hour stay of execution in PATHS OF
GLORY. Kubrick and Cobb are intent on driving home the message that war
means the bad guys will always win. Even if they're supposedly the good
guys.
--Review by Poffy The Cucumber (for Poffy's Movie Mania).
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