Film Review
Possibly the most consistently underrated war film ever made,
Cross of Iron is cinema's most
explicit depiction of the naked brutality of warfare and its corrosive
effect on the souls of the men who find themselves caught up in the
carnage of battlefield conflict. Taking as his inspiration Willi
Heinrich's 1955 novel
Das Geduldige
Fleisch (
The Willing Flesh),
director Sam Peckinpah creates a startling piece of cinematic art that
captures all of the ugliness and barbarity of modern warfare and makes
the most powerful anti-war statement seen in any film since Lewis
Milestone's
All Quiet on the Western Front
(1930).
Contrasting the nobility of the individual who sticks to his principles
against the gutless ignominy of those who cynically serve a debased regime that has
lost its moral purpose,
Cross of Iron
is quintessential Peckinpah and deals with themes that are central to
the director's oeuvre - the corruption of the innocent, the
dehumanising effect of violence and the conflict between values and
ideals. By the time he made this film, Peckinpah had already
earned some measure of notoriety, his private life proving to be every
bit as controversial as his films, which were widely censured for their
extreme depictions of physical violence. No wonder then that
Cross of Iron, with its abundance
of gory death and mutilation, was not well-received by the mainstream
press, who tore into it with no less ferocity than a pack of hounds
ripping into a fox after a protracted hunt.
Few critics could be bothered to look beyond the simulated
blood-letting and see that, far from wallowing in mayhem and misery,
the film is actually making some intelligent and timely observations on
violence, portraying it as a degrading perversion to be resisted rather
than something that is in any way good for the human
psyche. Unlike most war films, which present war as a
glorious adventure in which death, when it comes, is swift, clean and
pain-free,
Cross of Iron
shows war as it is - a totally barbaric ritual of mindless slaughter
where individuals can only survive by blasting away the brains and
internal organs of their opponents. Most of those who fall on the
battlefield are not instantly dispatched into oblivion, as most film
directors will have us believe, but experience excruciating agony
before succumbing to the welcome balm of extinction. Peckinpah
defies the sensibility of his audiences and critics and shows us the
reality, the true unexpurgated horror of war.
Unfortunately, this was not what audiences wanted to see and the film's
lukewarm reception dissuaded Peckinpah from ever making another war
film. Had the film been a hit, it could have completely
transformed the war movie genre, bringing a far greater realism that
would educate society to the true nature of warfare, perhaps making
military intervention a less easy option for those whom we elect to
govern us, as well as making us much more cognizant of the courage of
those who choose to fight on our behalf in those conflicts that are
unavoidable.
Certainly,
Cross of Iron is
not an easy film to watch. Peckinpah makes few concessions to
good taste and is unflinching in showing us such gruesome images as boy
soldiers being ripped apart under intense machine-gun fire whilst
others have their guts blown out by bombs and grenades (the visceral
impact heightened by Peckinpah's trademark slow-motion
photography). There are no sympathetic characters to soften
the viewing experience, and certainly nothing that may be mistaken for
a happy ending. The main protagonists are a cynical
battle-hardened thug (James Coburn, giving possibly his greatest
performance) and a sadistic manipulative Nazi opportunist (Maximilian
Schell as his most chilling) - two monstrous products of the war who
are equally twisted, but only one of whom can be rightly described as
evil.
The conflict between the film's two main characters serves as a metaphor for
a divided Germany, a country corrupted by flawed ideology and driven to
destruction by the action of self-serving hypocrites. The private
battle between Steiner and Stransky represents Germany's struggle for
identity in her darkest hour, reminding us that those who suffered most
from the scourge of Nazism were the German people themselves. A
far more complex and moral film than it is often credited as
being,
Cross of Iron offers a
sobering vision of war in general, portraying it not (as many films do)
as a boy's own adventure but as a physical and existential nightmare
from which no one can hope to emerge unscathed or truly
victorious. War is the ugliest of man's works, and it doesn't
hurt to be reminded of that fact once in a while.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
It is 1943 and Germany is losing the war on the Eastern
Front. After a humiliating defeat at Stalingrad, German
troops are in retreat, repelled by a determined Soviet fighting
machine. Corporal Steiner is a battle-hardened soldier in
the Germany army, contemptuous of officers but fiercely loyal to the
men who fight alongside him. He takes an instant dislike to his
new commanding officer, Captain Stransky, a Prussian aristocrat who
chose to be posted on the Eastern front to improve his chances of
winning the Iron Cross, Germany's greatest honour for valour.
Steiner sees Stranksy for what he is, a vainglorious coward who uses
blackmail and bribery to achieve his ends, and is unimpressed when the
captain promotes him to the rank of sergeant in an attempt to buy his
support. When Steiner refuses to recommend his commander
for the medal he craves, Stranksy realises that he is a dangerous
threat that must be dealt with...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.