Das
Boot Movie Review:
Most
foreign films banish themselves to somewhat weak distribution
or treatment, simply for the fact that these films have
those damned subtitles on the bottom of the screen. The
companies which dare to release them to the world are either
small yet devoted companies, like New Yorker Films, or small
subsidiaries to larger corporations, like Disney`s Miramax.
The films themselves usually do not get preferential treatment,
such as expensive remastering, either, for the small companies,
due to the cost of such an undertaking, or, for bigger studios,
due to the belief that it would be a waste of time to work
on a film which nobody will see anyway.
This
cannot be said of the new edition of the 1981 German film
Das Boot. Not only is it a remastered film, but it is also
reissued by Columbia Pictures. Such a thing is possible,
no doubt, because the director is Wolfgang Peterson, responsible
for In the Line of Fire and Air Force One, big action hits.
Watching this reissue is like watching any other reissue
by the Hollywood studios, as it contains a lot of technical
improvements, such as a new sound mix, and a general cleaning-up
of the picture. Das Boot looks brand new, and, befitting
an action/war film, almost as slick as numerous Hollywood
releases. If it weren`t for the subtitles, it might have
been a hit. The most significant improvement in this reissue
is the addition of one hour of new footage, never before
seen in theatres. This massive amount of new footage is
possible because Das Boot was actually a six-hour German
TV mini-series, which tells us that this "director`s cut"
is still not complete.
The
film recounts the German experience during World War II,
specifically the crew of a German submarine. The storyline
is almost entirely focussed on the mission of this crew,
as we are witness to the agony and the terror, as well as
the frequent boredom, of underwater combat. There is an
actual witness of sorts, in my view, at least, and that
is in the character of the Lieutenant, who is introduced
as a person invited by the sub`s captain to see and record
what a real underwater mission is like. The lieutenant,
a rather uptight and squeamish sort, ends up experiencing
much harsher events than he would have expected. Besides
the lieutenant, there are other characters on the sub who
personify a cross-section of the types of people who are
thrown into war.
I
must admit that I was a bit weary during the viewing of
this picture. The film`s length (3 hr. 30 min.) is somewhat
unusual for what is generally classified as an action film,
and not everyone will want to read subtitles for that long
either. The film does tend to drag, during the first half,
at least, even as it does successfully capture the intense
boredom followed by agonizing attacks in which there is
no guarantee of survival. The action scenes are also a bit
unusual at first, since they are not "exciting" or "exhilarating"
in any way that I (as one who spends more time with foreign
or classic films than with action flicks) am used to. Most
of the action set-pieces are very long, filled with shocks,
surprises, and panic, yet without the sense that they merely
exist to give us a charge. Perhaps it may be because there
is no guarantee that our heroes will win.
Now,
"heroes" is a very interesting turn of phrase, since we
are dealing with German soldiers in the worst war known
to humankind. But, of course, this film is not pro-Nazi,
or even very patriotic. It`s not even pro-Allied in any
clear sense. It is purely defeatist. The film gives us the
facts first: most of the soldiers on German subs died in
the war. And the story suggests that many of these soldiers
really had no choice but to fight and die for someone as
evil as Hitler. The older, world-weary participants of war
know this, and feel only pity for the young men who actually
believe that they are fighting for something noble. An old
drunken captain, at the soldier`s get-together, probably
sums it up best when he sarcastically claims that the abstaining,
womanless Hitler is the greatest war strategist in the world.
To go further, he could say that Hitler is responsible for
what occurs in situations like the ones in this film. He
is responsible for the lives uprooted in order to fight
for his cause. He is responsible for putting many lives
in constant, painful jeopardy. And he is also responsible
for creating the situation where Germans are forced to kill
people from other countries, total strangers, just so the
German elite have something to brag about.
As
I`ve said, the film tends to drag a bit from time to time.
But Das Boot still manages to present both a well-produced
war picture and a depiction of the ultimate hopelessness
and tragedy of war.
David
Macdonald
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