Review

  • This was an excellent movie. Amazing photography and casting and an

    intelligent scenario which passes messages about how horrific war is

    to the audience in the mildest yet touching way I've seen.

    The story involves a hospital in Scotland where officers are sent when

    they suffer a breakdown, a common phenomenon in the first and second

    world wars. In there, a doctor (played by Jonathan Pryce) attempts to

    treat his patients in a more humane way than the one other doctors of

    the time choose. Through the stories of characters in the hospital --

    including Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen, two poets who happen to

    meet and become friends in the hospital -- the life of the British

    soldiers in the first World War, as well as several political messages

    about that affecting era for humanity are successfully transmitted to

    the audience, without blood, without effects or huge battle scenes in

    a way that touches and indicates its significance more than any other

    film I've seen about the subject.

    The performances are excellent, with Johny Lee Miller -- who apart

    from this movie has not shown any signs of serious acting that I've

    seen -- delivering a very good performance of a shocked and ambitious

    officer and Jonathan Pryce metaphorically accepting the ideas of

    Sassoon -- who opposes to the war after a point where he realises its

    futility and the lack of values in the politicians driving it -- can

    be though as the link between the soldiers and humanity itself.

    It is definitely a movie I would recommend! Excellent.