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41 out of 47 people found the following review useful:
Lest We Forget, 21 February 2005
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Author:
puckstopper from Melbourne, Australia
Paradise Road is based on the true story of women POWs in Sumatra
during WWII. The film, for the most part, follows what really
happened... with one glaring exception!
The incident that is prominently missing from Paradise Road is the
Bangka Island massacre, which was one of the worst atrocities committed
against women POWs during WWII and is an integral part of this story.
After their ship, The SS Vyner Brooke, was sunk, the survivors made for
the nearest land which was Bangka Island. They came to shore in
different places but a group of more than a hundred people ended up on
Radji beach. The group consisted of 22 Australian Army nurses, some
civilian men, women and children, and 30 British soldiers from another
ship which had been sunk. The island was fully occupied by the Japanese
and the group unanimously decided to give themselves up. The group
leader set off to find someone to surrender to. The civilian women and
children began walking towards the main town on the island. The 22
nurses remained behind with the men and the soldiers (many of whom were
badly wounded), an elderly British woman also remained with her wounded
husband.
When the group leader returned with a group of 20 Japanese, they
ignored all requests for surrender. The Japanese shot and bayoneted the
men, then ordered the 23 women to walk into the ocean. When they
reached waist depth, the Japanese open fired with a machine gun and
mowed the women down.
There was one survivor. One of the nurses, Vivian Bullwinkel, was shot
through the side and survived by pretending to be dead. She hid in the
jungle for 12 days, caring for a British soldier who had been bayoneted
and left for dead (he later died). Eventually, she gave herself up and
was re-united with the rest of the women in the prison camp in Muntok.
When she told them what had happened on the beach and they quickly
realised that they would all be killed if the Japanese learned there
was a witness to the massacre. So they made a pact not to speak of it
again until they were free.
Paradise Road is a fictional film based loosely on fact, not a
documentary. Sometimes it is necessary to make changes to the real
sequence of events in order for the film's structure and pacing to
work. I do accept this and I would prefer to see a good film rather
than a accurate one.
But in leaving out the massacre on the beach, the film does a
disservice to these women. These women were aware, from the start of
their internment, that the Japanese were capable of atrocities on a
massive scale and that there was no safety in numbers. They lived in a
constant state of fear that the Japanese would repeat such an act or
learn that Vivian Bullwinkel had survived the massacre and kill them
all.
Paradise Road tries to portray Japanese atrocities with a fictitious
incident where a woman is set on fire (which did not really happen) but
this does not compare to the scale of the 80 people massacred on Radji
beach and the effect it had on the women in the camp. There were 32
Australian Army nurses in the camp and the women who died on the beach
were their friends and colleagues. They were from the same unit and had
nursed together for the first two years of the war. All their
interactions with the Japanese guards were coloured by the knowledge
that they had murdered 22 of their friends in cold blood.
Paradise Road is a very good movie and I suspect it will become the
definitive film about female POWs during WWII. Which sadly means that
the 22 women who were murdered on Radji beach will be lost from
memory... and they deserve better than that.
If you want to learn more about the women POWs of Sumatra, I suggest
you read "White Coolies: Australian Nurses Behind Enemy Lines," the
diary kept by camp survivor Betty Jeffrey, or read the biography
"Bullwinkel" by Norman G. Manners. There is also an excellent 1985
documentary called "Song of Survival", and a really tacky episode of
"Willesee's Australians" that dramatises the story of Vivian
Bullwinkel.
28 out of 31 people found the following review useful:
A heartfelt, underrated work of art with some magnificent performances., 12 January 2002
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Author:
Jen_UK from England
Why didn't more people see this film? This is what makes it
great:
As an ensemble piece it works wonderfully - the cast are truly
magnificent.
Glenn Close is fabulous as the 'central' character and most well known
'star', but she does not monopolise all the scenes and screen time. She
blends in with what is a wonderful cast, and does so impeccably. Why she
hasn't been given more kudos as an actress is beyond me - she is
stunning.
The film worked perfectly because of what comes across as a genuine
rapport
between the female cast. Each actress brings a different element to the
story - Jennifer Ehle is strong willed and beautiful, Julianna Marguilles
fiesty and dominant, Pauline Collins has such a human quality which she
conveys to perfection, Cate Blanchett portrays wonderfully a quiet woman
with a rebellious side. All compliment and balance each other. The
actresses
succeed admirably in bringing to the fore the bond that grew between their
real life inspirations for this story.
The direction is precise and the cinematogrpahy beautiful. Despite the
bleak context, Japan still looks vibrant and colourful, full of life.
The score. I can't do justice to the score in words - the vocal orchestra
formed by the women is just beautiful and poignant to listen to and really
does need to be heard to be understood. Somehow the actresses manage to
make
the music symbolise their humanity and spirit. It works
wonderfully.
Overall, this is a heartfelt film with a profound message of hope which
runs all the way through it. 'Paradise Road' is one of those rare films
which reminds you of the indestructible nature of the human spirit. I wish
there were more films like this one, and I wish more people had have seen
this film. In a word it's a gem.
14 out of 14 people found the following review useful:
Gripping and uplifting true story of women faced with indomitable odds., 9 January 2001
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Author:
Anthony Lampert (a.lampert@btinternet.com) from Margate, Kent, England
This film gripped me from the opening scene in the hotel ballroom and prooved to be a class act right to the end. Director Bruce Beresford's track record includes Driving Miss Daisy, Tender Mercies and Breaker Morant, so Paradise Road came as a special treat, not realising at the time of viewing that he had directed these films. The realistic scenes of violence had a tremendous impact in contrast to some of the wonderful underplaying of the leading actresses, notably Glenn Close and Pauline Collins. The Japanese actors, although unknown to me were chillingly effective. I can only hope for more films of this calibre but alas they are few and far between.
12 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
Moving moments - Put yourself in their place., 14 May 2003
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Author:
JedaiBesk from Corby, England
A little slow to start, but the plot picks up early in the film, and
leaves
you thinking about "What would you do in their position?" - not just the
women internees, but also the Japanese Soldiers involved at the time. All
are involved with their own emotions, as controlled from 'authorities'
above
them.
Based on a true event, you can watch this film and empathise with all of
the
characters (both 'Goodies' and 'Baddies'). You'll be left thinking very
hard
about the persons who 'did it' for real.
In the middle of the film, when the Vocal Orchestra perform Dvorak's "New
World Symphony" without instruments, and at the end of the film,
"Londonerry
Air" (Oh Danny Boy), a box of tissues may be required accessories.
11 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
Ethics reminder, 23 February 2004
Author:
rominaferraro (nenadeantes@gmail.com)
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
[SPOILER]
I caught this movie on cable when it had started maybe half an hour before.
I hadn't watched it before because I thought it would be corny. It wasn't
that bad, I think, but even if it were hideous, there was one scene that
made the movie worthy: the one in which the Japanese commander sings to
Close's character.
I read a text by Umberto Eco about ethics, in which he explained that you
failed to respect others' rights when you don't see those others as equals,
and this scene was the perfect example. It was beautiful and, at the same
time, terrible to see that this man, who almost kills her in other
circumstances, has the human need to be acknowledged and approved by her. It
is beautiful and terrible to see how he can disrespect her human rights and
at the same time respect her opinion so much. And you can see it in Close's
face: the perplexity of recognizing for a moment her captor as a human being
who is capable of terror and beauty. Eco was absolutely right: music is too
human a skill; you cannot listen to somebody who sings and still regard
him/her as something inferior. And yet the roles cannot change that easily.
Hate becomes harder, but is there anyway.
The scene was very powerful for me, because it summarized a war too well: a
chaos where everybody is dehumanized and everybody fights to be human
again.
12 out of 16 people found the following review useful:
Strong, moving testament, 31 May 2004
Author:
trpdean from New York, New York
I love this movie because I love the characterization of the women in it. I
felt powerfully with the women, felt I knew them, felt complete
identification with most of them.
I actually think it's hard to specify the actions and words that will make a
character both realistic and sympathetic. Showing mere suffering won't do
it. But here, Mr. Beresford has been able to stir such warm feelings
(particularly toward the Roberts girl, the Glenn Close and Jennifer Ehle,
her Dutch friend, and the Cate Blanchett characters). The romanticism, cheer
and background of the Ehle character are particularly well drawn.
This is a far superior movie to 'Platoon', by the way - and a wonderful
tribute to those who went through the awful 3.5 year ordeal.
Another thing I quite liked (these days) was to see a movie that did not
attempt to make the Caucasians the moral villain relative to the other race
depicted.
This is not a movie concerned with p.c. appearances - the Japanese are not
shown as somehow merely "different", a difference we "simply cannot
understand or judge" because of our different culture. Setting a woman on
fire for bargaining for medicine for a sick elderly woman is brutality in
any culture - and this movie does not attempt to minimize the moral wrong.
Bravo, Mr. Beresford.
7 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
Why isn't this film better known?, 2 July 2003
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Author:
srne from Massachusetts
I stumbled across this movie surfing TV channels late one night. I was drawn right into the plot, and thought it was an incredible story, incredibly well-told. It's a true story, which I previously did not know anything about, but should have. Both the story, itself, and the film, should be much, much better known. It is also one of Glenn Close's best performances. Her performance, and the film, itself, are absoultely gripping! If you like true-life stories that are extremely well-done, such as "We Were Soldiers," then this one is of a similar genre, but with the main characters being women.
6 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Totally Oscar worthy, totally ignored!!!, 12 October 2004
Author:
PeachHamBeach from CA
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
POSSIBLE SPOILERS
I watch this movie every other year or even less often. It's best that
way because it is such a beautiful, powerful, uplifting story of
British, German American and Austrailian POWs struggling to survive the
brutality of WWII in Japanese-occupied Sumatra. There are many horrific
scenes, the death of a Chinese woman by fire, the head of a man on a
stick in a village, and especially the torture of one Austrailian woman
who made a terrible blunder by whispering while the Japanese soldiers
were making a speech. The strong cast features Glenn Close (I think she
was wonderful!!!), Julianna Marguilies, Cate Blanchett, Pauline Collins
(a lovely performance), Frances McDormand and many other women whose
names escape me. Their vocal orchestra was their way of trying to hold
onto their spirits in the miserable conditions they were forced to live
in. Even the women who eventually lost their will to live were an
inspiration on film. I don't know what other versions of this story
were brought to life on film, but in my mind, this beautiful film was
worthy of Academy Awards galore!!! I give it an A+++++++!!!
5 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Reduced Shakespeare Company does Tenko, 18 May 2003
Author:
inconstantreader from Leicester, England
'Paradise Road' is not the first time the story of European and
Australian
prisoners of the Japanese during WW2 has been told - there is a famous
old
movie of Neville Shute's 'A Town Like Alice' and the BBC's wonderful tv
series, 'Tenko', from the early 1980s. Nevertheless there is certainly
scope
for this film, which tells the story of a group of largely upper class
women
who have to come to terms with captivity and brutality as a 'defeated
race'
and somehow survive the war. The particular twist to this film is the
fact-based story of the choir a group of women started in one camp. In
other
ways, however, the story is practically identical to 'Tenko', only
crammed
into around 2 hours instead of 30. This means that the effect is very
much
like watching one of those Reduced Shakespeare Company shows that do the
Complete Works of Shakespeare in one performance. Virtually nothing
happens
in Paradise Road that doesn't happen in Tenko - fair enough, since it is
fact based, but you feel like you're watching whole episodes crammed into
a
single line and you find yourself desperate for more character
development -
you never find out, for example, who Glenn Close's character really
_is_.
Despite this, the acting is top-hole and the script-writing is quite
sparky,
while production values are for the most part extremely high - this is a
very good looking film. And therein lies a problem. While the violence is
not sanitised, the starvation is. The women in this film appear to have
suffered no more ill effects after 3 years of captivity and hard labour
than
a healthy sun tan and fetching urchin-style crop. The fight-in-the-shower
scene shows us an array of perfect bodies with no sores, sunburn,
bruises,
skin diseases etc. (Again, Tenko did this much better.) When some of the
women are meant to be dying of starvation towards the end the idea that
these healthy women are meant to be suffering is so laughable as to be
more
like amateur dramatics than professional movie making. In failing to give
a
sense of the struggle to survive that the real women went through, this
film
diminishes their courage and does not do them justice.
This film is watchable, however, and tells stories that need to be told.
Watch it by all means - but 'Tenko' is now out on video, so get that
next!
5 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Moving film, 16 January 2001
Author:
K. Moran (ktgrate@aol.com) from Chicago, IL
I found this a very moving film about a group of fairly ordinary people
placed in extraordinary conditions. I found myself quite involved with all
the acting and the story line. Here is a film filled with outstanding and
understated performances about people's ideals and courage being
tested.
As to this story having been told in 2 or 3 other movies, I find that to be
an incredible comment. I didn't see anyone saying that there had already
been about 100 movies about men fighting in World War II when "Saving
Private Ryan" came out. It is time that the stories of these extraordinary
women be told. Soldiers aren't the only ones to suffer and die in
wars.
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