SPOILER
ALERT! The plot will be discussed.
Director
Stanley Kubrick’s 1957 film that is set during WWI is his first great work, and
points to the techniques and themes he would later use in satiric masterpieces
on men and war.
The
film is shot in black and white which helps to stress the grim state of warfare
and the fate of the soldiers made to fight for the questionable honor of their
countries. The opening of the movie has the French national anthem playing in
the background, but the drum pounding sounds are loud, almost brash, which
suggests a patriotism that has been distorted. There is a voice-over narration
which sets the scene. The action takes place in France in 1916, which is two
years after the start of hostilities between France and Germany. The “battered”
French pushed the Germans back from the Marne River after their quick
advancement against the French Army. The front was stabilized and turned into
trench warfare for “two grisly years,” with little change in the positions of
the two military forces. The narrator says, “Successful attacks were measured
in hundreds of yards, and paid for in lives, by hundreds of thousands.” From
this statement, we see the futility and lethal nature of warfare, as large
numbers of soldiers are sacrificed to gain small patches of land for their
countries.
General
George Broulard (Adolphe Menjou) arrives to meet with the local commander,
General Paul Mireau (George Macready), who set up his headquarters in a
sumptuous French chateau. Broulard comments on the lovely accommodations and
Mireau says he tries to create a pleasant atmosphere in which to work. An
ironic statement, considering his “work” involves sacrificing his men to kill
others. Broulard’s statement about how he wishes he had Mireau’s taste in
carpets adds to this feeling of a disconnect between the military brass and the
men fighting the battles. Broulard says they want to break through the German lines
by capturing “the Anthill,” a German stronghold, which is key to the German
defenses in the area. The insect name of the hill implies that it is something
insignificant when measured against the loss of human life to capture it.
Mireau says it’s out of the question and thinks trying to do it in a couple of
days is absurd. He says that his division is in pieces now. Broulard tempts him
by saying he would get another star and a promotion to a better assignment.
Mireau says his reputation and commitment to his men are more important than
his ambition. But this is all surface nobility, what he’s supposed to say as a
father figure to his men. Once Broulard says maybe Mireau’s men aren’t capable
of accomplishing the objective, it seems like a challenge and a questioning of
Mireau’s leadership abilities. Mireau changes his stance that the mission is
impossible and now says, “We just might do it.” As they speak, they walk around
the large room, which emphasizes its majesty, but also shows how small these
men are that have somehow gained the power to send hundreds of thousands to their deaths. The institution of the military, and later religion, seem to take on a life of their own and everyone is manipulated by the organizations' stagnant procedures.
We
then get a shot through an opening in the earthen trenches, a far cry from the
luxury of the chateau. Mireau walks among the men and his phony patriotic words
about being “ready to kill more Germans,” and saying to a soldier that his
mother must be “proud” of him, give little comfort to the serviceman whose face
and voice appear and sound defeated from enduring the carnage. Mireau repeats
the same lines as shells explode close by, the sounds of the death-dealing
weapons deflating his presenting war as glorious and heroic. (IMDb points out
that the title of the film comes from the line, “The paths of glory lead but to
the grave,” from Thomas Gray’s “Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard.”).
Mireau then comes to a soldier who doesn’t respond right away and seems
confused about whether he has a wife. He then breaks down and says he won’t see
his wife because he is going to get killed. Another soldier says he suffers
from shell shock. Mireau, who has a scar on his face and at least once was in
battle, shows how he has forgotten what war does to a man as he rose through
the ranks when he says there’s “no such thing.” Mireau slaps the soldier and
says the man is acting like a coward. He wants the man transferred out before
he “infects” the others, characterizing the man’s suffering as a type of
communicable disease that must be stopped, instead of understanding the nature
of his condition. (This episode is echoed later in a similar scene in Patton). From a stylistic perspective, Kubrick uses the first of several
narrow tracking shots as Mireau moves through the trench. If the men are going to take the Anthill, then they are used as warrior insects and the trenches are their trails. The effect is
claustrophobic, compared to the large, airy chateau room. Kubrick’s style here
seems fresh, new, pointing to the future of experimentation in filmmaking.
Mireau
visits Col. Dax (Kirk Douglas). The general acts like he doesn’t want to sit,
saying he’s not comfortable behind a desk. He’s trying to come off as if he’s
not a bureaucrat, but is still an active fighting man, which is just posing.
Mireau says a soldier behind a desk is only worried about small things, like a
mouse running up a soldier’s leg. Dax, preferring the mundane over the
self-destructive nature of men who thirst for the deluded glory of war, and
showing he is capable of wordplay, says, “If I had the choice between mice and
Mausers, I think I’d take the mice every time.” They look through a scope to see
the Anthill, and Mireau says he has encountered more formidable objectives. His
downplaying is invalidated by more shells exploding right next to them. He
calls the objective “pregnable.” Mireau makes it sound as if a battle to take
over a spot of land is similar to having a romantic conquest. Dax says Mireau’s
speech is like saying something about “giving birth,” which is usually about
producing life, but here war is the midwife delivering death. (Kubrick will
brilliantly draw connections between the sexual urges of men and their desire
to wage war in Dr. Strangelove).
Mireau says Dax is clever, and we learn that Dax was a respected lawyer before
entering the military, and this bit of information sets the stage for the trial
to come later.
Dax
had several casualties in a previous battle, but Mireau’s executive officer,
Major Saint-Auban (Richard Anderson), says, with a condescending tone, their
defeat was “a kind of animal thing,” because they acted like less evolved
animals, subject to the herd instinct, bunching together, and making themselves
vulnerable. Dax, understanding what a soldier experiences, counters by saying
it was “kind of a human sort of thing,” to do so, as their lives were threatened,
and they sought protection. As characters speak, there is machine-gun fire in
the background constantly, implying that there is no escape from danger here.
Mireau, despite the extreme probability of defeat, says that Dax’s men will
storm the Anthill the next day. The general coolly provides the percentages of
men who will get killed by friendly fire, going through “No-Man’s-Land,” (the
area between the two military forces), and as they approach the barbed wire
defense lines. He acts like it’s their job to “absorb” shrapnel and gunfire so
others can get to the goal. He sounds like an accountant spouting statistics
involving numbers, not people. Dax says that half of his men will die. Mireau,
not showing any empathy, says the losses are “regrettable,” but they will have
obtained their objective, which is their duty. Dax quietly objects to not
needing to have the French flag waved in front of him to make him charge into
battle like a patriotic bull. Dax says that Samuel Johnson had a different
view of patriotism, calling it, “the last refuge of a scoundrel,” emphasizing
how some put on a disguise and drape themselves in patriotic fervor to get what
they want. Mireau threatens Dax, saying he needs his enthusiastic support, or
else he must relieve him of his command. Dax, not wanting to abandon his men in
the inevitable battle to come, says his soldiers can take the Anthill.
Three
men are assigned to do reconnaissance in preparation for the assault. The men
are weary and the leader, Lt. Roget (Wayne Morris) has drunk too much to
adequately deal with the mission. He and the other men, Cpl. Phillipe Paris
(Ralph Meeker) and Pvt. Lejeune (Kem Dibbs) look like ants, insects ruled by
the hive, as they crawl toward the appropriately named Anthill. Drums in the
background again reinforce the rhythm of troops marching into war. Dead bodies
litter the battlefield, which looks like an open grave cemetery. Roget is a
coward, and incompetent. He breaks up the night patrol, which is not a good strategic idea, since it’s difficult to see comrades at night. Roget gets scared and runs
off. Paris discovers Lejeune’s body which has steaming smoke emanating from it
like he was burned in hellfire, which backs up the saying that “war is hell.”
Back at the camp, Paris accuses Roget of cowardice which resulted in Lejeune’s
death. Roget, only thinking of saving his own skin, threatens Paris with
charges of insubordination and threatening a superior officer. Col. Dax shows
up and Roget lies, saying that Lejeune started coughing, thus drawing the
attention of the enemy and almost getting the other two killed.
Dax
tells his men about the assault on the Anthill the next day. The fact that the
weather prediction is for sun all day, making it easier to be seen by the
enemy, shows how even the weather adds to the odds of success being against
them. We never see any enemy soldiers, which implies that the French soldiers
don’t really know who the enemy is, only that they are told by their superiors
that they must kill these “others.” After we see how their own commanders treat
the men, the audience may well question if leaders such as Mireau and Broulard are
just as lethal to soldiers as those shooting at them from the other side. Dax
informs his men that they won’t receive backup until the end of the day, which
demonstrates how the military is not concerned about its infantrymen and will
not waste its artillery shells until after the task is accomplished to capture
the Anthill. The men begin to accept that they will die in the battle and
what’s left to talk about is whether it’s better to be killed by a bayonet or
a machine gun, the latter being quicker. One soldier argues that everyone is mortal,
so people are more afraid of getting hurt and suffering rather than dying; it’s
the manner of demise that we are afraid of. The other soldier says it doesn’t
matter how one dies, everyone is afraid of dying. In the face of such a dire
situation, all hope is lost, and morbid conversations are all that remain.
On
the morning of the battle, the commanders drink cognac, toasting themselves as
they hope for victory, but their lives are not at risk. The cut to the trenches
shows a different atmosphere, one of dread, as explosions bombard the ears of
the soldiers. They huddle against the sides of the trenches as Dax grimly walks
among them. The wide-angle tracking shots suggest being caught in a hellish,
inescapable maze. The infernal vision of the trenches contrasts with the
opulence of the general’s chateau. There is a countdown as to when they will
charge, like a countdown to death. Dax leads the assault. As he moves forward
with his rallying whistle, men die all around him. Back at command
headquarters, Mireau yells that the men are not advancing, and that they are
cowards. He orders artillery fire on his own positions to spur his men forward,
but which makes him the real enemy, a traitor to his own soldiers. The Battery Commander, Capt. Rousseau (John
Stein), says he can’t carry out such a command unless the general takes official
responsibility by writing and signing the order. Mireau relieves Rousseau of
his command. Dax tries to get his men who sought refuge in the trenches to try
again, but a dead body falls on him as he tries to climb out. It becomes clear
to him that any further attempt is futile. Mireau rants and wants the soldiers
to receive the death penalty for falling back into their own trenches. He says
if the men “won’t face German bullets, they’ll face French ones.” So, the
soldiers are in a deadly no-win situation, as they are just as threatened by their
own side as they are by that of the enemy.
Back
at the chateau, Mireau tells Broulard that he will have ten men from each
company in his regiment tried for cowardice and they will receive the death
penalty. Dax argues that the men were pinned down, and it wasn’t that they were
refusing orders. Mireau says they have “skimmed milk” in their veins, not
blood. Dax counters with, “it’s the reddest milk I’ve ever seen. My trenches
are soaked with that red skimmed milk.” Dax is angry and says he’s not going to
mince words. The outraged Mireau says he’ll place him under arrest. Broulard,
who sounds reasonable and calm on the surface, but underneath is just as cruel
as Mireau, tries to avoid giving Dax the opportunity to present a negative case
against command orders. He says if brought to trial, Dax would be granted all
sorts of latitude in presenting his case. Dax does say he didn’t mean to be
insubordinate. However, he presses his argument that the men didn’t advance
because they couldn’t. The verbally combative Mireau (it’s the only way he
allows himself to fight) says that all of Dax’s men are “scum,” and the only
way that it could be proven that they couldn’t advance would be if they were
killed in the assault. That is quite a lethal argument, not allowing for any
survivors. Mireau’s argument is one that most military backers make which is
that individual soldiers can’t make any decisions, but must only follow orders,
no matter how absurd those orders may be, to avoid chaos in the ranks.
At
first Mireau wants a hundred soldiers tried. Dax says why not execute all of
them, if they are all to blame. Broulard, always looking to avoid any bad
publicity, rejects that idea as extreme. So, Dax is willing to sacrifice
himself for his men, and says place the blame with the officer in charge, him.
But Broulard doesn’t want to put any blame on officers, he being one in the
command hierarchy, and says that would exacerbate the problem. He offers that
twelve soldiers can be the scapegoats to take the symbolic blame for the
failure to take the Anthill, making sure the General Staff is free from
responsibility. When Mireau quibbles, Broulard says they shouldn’t haggle,
which is exactly what they are doing, only it isn’t over the price of fruit,
but men’s lives. Mireau dwindles the number to three soldiers, who will be
picked by the troops. He sheds the blame for singling out specific men by
forcing the soldiers to betray their own comrades. The soldiers are made into
killers of their own colleagues. In essence they are doing the job of the enemy
for them. Of course, it is ridiculous given how many retreated to zero in on
only three, but for Dax that’s better than condemning many others. Dax requests
that he be able to defend the men, which Broulard accepts, despite Mireau’s disappointment.
Mireau,
while with Broulard, runs into Battery Commander Rousseau, and now tries to
cover up his order to shell his own men. He says that Rousseau’s shells fell
short in the fight, and instead of charging him with disobeying an order,
Mireau says Rousseau should report back to his post for further orders.
Broulard says the man should be disciplined for his miscalculations, but Mireau
doesn’t want an inquiry that might reveal his twisted order, so he tells
Broulard that he’ll just reassign the man. Afterwards, in private, behind
Broulard’s back, Mireau says he’ll break Dax if he doesn’t drop his defense of
the accused three men.
Dax
tells three officers to pick one man each for trial. Dax meets with the men
chosen. One, Pvt. Pierre Arnaud (Joe Turkel), was picked by a lottery, so
arbitrary is the way of determining who might be executed. Paris was chosen by
Roget because he confronted the lieutenant about his cowardice and getting
Lejeune killed. So, the real coward is not put on trial. Another, Pvt. Ferol
(Timothy Carey) who says he was marked as “socially undesirable,” so he was
picked simply because others did not find him likable. Dax tells Paris that
accusing Roget, an officer, of retribution will only get him in more hot water,
and that despite the reasons for how they became defendants, they must deal
with the accusations against them. Dax is a bit naive to believe he has a case
as he advises the defendants to give simple statements, stick to the facts
involving the battle, don’t argue or complain, and look the judges in the eyes.
The
trial takes place in the chateau, a civilized, grand place, which is far
removed from the cruel reality of the war, and which makes the soldiers who
were caught up in the battle seem out of place in comparison. Dax complains
that the full charges were not read, but the judges dismiss his complaint,
saying they are simply accused of cowardly action. Already, it seems that the
proper rules of a fair proceeding are dispensed with. The prosecutor,
Saint-Auban, asks Ferol what he did, and will not hear his description of the
situation, what he saw, or anything about the bullets zinging around him, thus
not allowing for any true picture of the circumstances. Ferol said he advanced
to “No-Man’s-Land,” and then retreated. The court isn’t even ready to give Dax
a chance to question Ferol, and he must ask for permission. Dax says Ferol was
with another private, so why did they not try to capture the Anthill. Ferol
says he must be kidding, which is the point that Dax is making, that it was
absurd for them to continue to attack. The chief magistrate (Peter
Capell), however, doesn’t see the point,
because he believes a soldier follows orders, no matter the circumstances.
Arnaud
is next and testifies that he advanced until ordered to stop. He made it only
to his own wire defenses. The prosecution gets him to say that he did not
advance “many” meters before stopping. He is also asked if he urged others to
move forward, to which Arnaud says everyone around him was either dead or
wounded. Yet, the prosecutor again asks the absurd question in order to get his
negative answer. Dax asks if his action was any different than the others, and
Arnaud says no. Dax is trying to show how the choosing of these men to stand
trial is unfair, saying that Arnaud was singled out based on a lottery, not
because he was a coward. The judge says Arnaud had as much chance as any other
to not be accused, which dispenses with the questionable point of having the
lottery to start with, and zeroes in only on the fairness of the steps
following the acceptance of the method of choosing who was tried. Dax wants to
read into the record how Arnaud has no record of cowardice in his past, and in
fact that he distinguished himself in battle. The judge says it’s irrelevant,
that only his current behavior is on trial, which dispenses with the question
as to whether it is valid to accuse this one man of cowardice out of all the
others who retreated without considering what may distinguish him from the
others not accused. It would be as if five men allegedly robbed a bank, and the
prosecutor picked only one name out of a hat to determine who should stand
trial, and then the judge threw out all the evidence that could show him as
less guilty than the others.
When
questioned, Paris says he never left the trenches. Dax asks him why he didn’t
leave, and he says a man who was shot dead fell on him and knocked Paris out
during the attack. The judge, presuming the man is guilty instead of innocent,
takes over the prosecutor’s job, showing the court’s prejudice, by saying Paris
has no witnesses to back him up, and the large scar on his forehead could have
been self-inflicted afterwards, and not incurred from the falling man.
In
his summation, the prosecutor says the attack on the Anthill was a “stain” on
the nation’s honor, and there must be atonement by executing the guilty. Dax
does not hold back, saying, “There are times that I’m ashamed to be a member of
the human race and this is one such occasion.” He says he protests the
authenticity of the court by not allowing him to present witnesses to support
his arguments, and yet the prosecution offered no hard evidence or witnesses to
support its case. He also complains that there were no written charges, and
there was no recording of the proceedings. Dax reverses the prosecutor’s charge
as to where dishonor really exists, and says not the battle, but the trial is a
“stain” on the nation’s honor.
We
don’t even hear a verdict. It is a foregone conclusion. Instead, we have a
scene where the soldier in charge of the execution squad tells the men that
they must carry out their orders, or they will be held responsible. Basically,
there is the threat of putting guns to the heads of the men in the firing squad
if they don’t shoot their weapons. Thus, there is no room for free choice in
the military. The story presents the different reactions of the sentenced men
in order to be realistic in depicting how soldiers might truly respond to such
a situation. The condemned are given a last meal (like one really has an
appetite before one’s own execution), but Ferol, after first taking some bites
of roast duck, spits out the food, thinking they are being drugged into being
docile for the firing squad. He still says Dax will think of something to get
them freed. He is still in denial. Arnaud is angry and desperate. Paris wants
to escape, but eventually realizes it’s hopeless.
The
chaplain, Father Dupree (Emile Myer) comes to the cell and says that Dax sent
him. The priest says that Dax found no men in charge wanted to be involved in
the case, washing their hands, like Pontius Pilate, trying to absolve
themselves of responsibility. Ferol, the reality crashing in on him, cries.
Paris asks that the priest send his letter to his spouse, in which he says he
tried to tell what happened, but concedes that there is no way to really
explain the absurdity of what has occurred. Even though not religious, the
priest gets Paris to make his confession. However, Arnaud says the priest’s
line about how “Death comes to us all,” is a sanctimonious cliché. Arnuad says
his religion is the wine he drinks, and mocks confession as he prays to the
bottle. For him right now, religion is equated with the numbing effects of
alcohol, both providing an escape from reality. The priest says God has the
power to save, but Arnaud says there is no saving here. He hits the priest, and
is ready to attack Paris, who hits him hard, causing a skull fracture. He is
unconscious, and the priest says they wouldn’t execute him in this state. But,
the doctor (Halder Hanson), who says the man might not last the night, and is
supposed to care about the well-being of patients, says the execution will
occur, so they should make sure that Arnaud is vertical for the firing squad.
He adds that the general will want Arnaud conscious, so he can experience his
execution. In other words, God forbid he should die before the military gets
its scapegoat blood spilled, or that the commanders don’t get a chance to see
the man face the horror of his own death.
The
coward, Roget, is with Dax, saying how unfortunate the executions will be, and
how no one is happy about them. Dax repeats his words, mocking Roget’s
watered-down sense of being upset. Dax asks why he picked Paris? Roget responds
with the explanation that somebody had to be picked. Dax knows that Roget did
it to get rid of Paris and his accusations against Roget. As retribution, Dax
says he needs to pick someone to head up the firing squad, so it will be Roget.
He tells him that he has to tie the men to the posts, offer blindfolds, give
the order to shoot the men, and then use his revolver to put a bullet in each
man’s brain to ensure the execution. He wants the weak-willed Roget to feel the
weight of his guilt for sending innocent men accused of being cowards to their deaths, when it was Roget who was the one who was truly guilty of the
charge. Rousseau enters saying he has information that bears on the trial. We
know he is going to tell Dax about Mireau’s order to fire on his own troops,
which shows that there are still honorable men in the military.
The
next scene has a tracking shot, though in contrast to the horrific one in the
trench, showing dancers at a military ball amid elegant surroundings and music
as those present enjoy themselves while others suffer their fates at the hands
of the privileged men in attendance. Broulard’s dance is interrupted because
Dax wants to speak with him. The general admits that the number of casualties
shows that Dax’s men may have made a good attempt to take the Anthill. Dax says
if so, how can the execution of the men take place. Broulard admits that the
General Staff may have known how the attack had a zero chance of success, but
the commanders are subject to criticism from the press and elsewhere, and they
have to put up a show of strength in the waging of the war. So, he says, “why
should we have to bear any more criticism for failure than we have to.” Instead
those in charge delegate the blame for being unsuccessful onto the almost
anonymous innocent soldiers who have no power to fight the injustice they must
endure. Broulard goes on to say that the executions boost morale because seeing
someone else die is “fundamentally encouraging and stimulating,” even motivational. He uses “morale” in a strange way here, because it is supposed
to be a positive stimulant, not the negative reaction to fear of punishment
invoked by lethal means. Broulard condescendingly says that the troops are
“like children.” They crave discipline like from a father. Kubrick’s satiric
voice is now heard, one to be sounded loudly in Dr. Strangelove and Full
Metal Jacket, when Broulard says “one way to maintain discipline is to
shoot a man now and then,” hardly the equivalent of a parent’s grounding a
child or issuing a stern reprimand. Not being able to believe his own ears, Dax
asks, “Do you sincerely believe all the things you’ve just said?” Broulard
looks at Dax askance, as if to say this is no time to be honest, because he
must maintain this front to justify the despicable actions of turning the
pursuit of victory into a public relations show. Dax then drops the bomb about
Mireau ordering the firing on his own men. Dax gives him sworn statements
attesting to Mireau’s orders. Dax says it will be a publicity nightmare
(using Broulard’s language). He argues that if the three soldiers are not
executed, then it will show that the General Staff was acting justly in blaming
Mireau for his failure to take the Anthill and recklessly endangering his own
men as he desperately tried to deal with his failure. He then tried to shift
his blame onto innocent soldiers by putting them on trial. Broulard excuses
himself, making no promises.
The
next day, the detail of men to carry out the execution show up where the
prisoners are confined, so we know Broulard is not stopping the executions.
Paris engages ironically in small talk with the sergeant in charge, but then
breaks down, and says that he doesn’t want to die. The sergeant tells him to
act like a man in his moment of death since he is not alone as many of them
will, sadly, be joining him soon. The ceremony of execution is formal and
staged in front of the large chateau. They carry Arnaud in a stretcher, making
the scene even more pathetic. Ferol walks with the priest, but cries, saying he
fought on the battlefield with the others, so why is he being singled out? He
is scared, and the film tries to show how men might really feel and act at this
moment, not in the John Wayne stoicism that men are told to exhibit, which is
not authentic and allows them not to be genuine about their feelings. The
priest tells Ferol he can’t question the ways of God, but it is like admitting
to the man there is no reasonable explanation to resolve what is happening to
Ferol and the other two. The sergeant pinches the cheek of Arnaud so he can be
alert to be killed, conjuring up the phrase “cruel and unusual punishment.”
Roget is there offering blindfolds, and apologizing to Paris, which is too
little, too late. This scene somewhat resembles Jesus Christ’s
crucifixion, since Jesus, like these soldiers, made a sacrifice so others would
be spared condemnation. The drums sound like exaggerated heartbeats, that then
cease as the weapons are fired.
The
next scene ironically offsets the horror of the previous scene, as Broulard and
Mireau eat in the chateau, with Mireau thanking Broulard for being there at the
execution, supposedly to lend him support at such a grim scene. Mireau says,
however, there was “splendor” in the scene, and Broulard says he had never seen
this type of “affair” (a euphemism, like it was an entertainment event) handled
better. Mireau says one worries that the condemned might spoil it with an
unsightly display, again showing how appearances are more important than the
awful truth of what is happening. Today we call it “optics.” Broulard had
summoned Dax. Mireau tells Dax his men “died very well,” as he stuffs his
mouth, still able to enjoy the pleasures of being a living general, who can
easily dispense with those down the chain of command. Then Broulard casually
brings up the order to attack Mireau’s own troops. Of course, Mireau denies it
despite the evidence. Broulard says then he will be able to clear his name in an
inquiry, since he doesn’t want this to become a public smear. Broulard did not
stop the executions, not wanting Dax to think he could control him. But, he
doesn’t want a scandal, so he makes Mireau a scapegoat, ironically just as
Mireau made his men play the same part. Mireau tells Broulard that he was the
only “innocent” man being harmed here, which is the opposite of what happened,
the true innocent men having been put to death. Mireau is a murderer, (but so
is his accomplice, Broulard), but he gets away without being executed. Mireau
says that Broulard’s treachery was inflicted on “a soldier,” which is what he
calls himself, but Mireau himself brought harm to the real soldiers in his
command. After Mireau leaves, Broulard says to Dax it had to be done, because
they can’t have fools running the show. What he’s really saying is Mirerau
wasn’t smart in playing his role in the planned massacre. Broulard then offers
Dax Mireau’s job. Dax bluntly asks if he wants him to tell Broulard where to
shove the promotion. Broulard angrily says he better apologize. Dax, really
apologizing to himself, says he apologizes for not “being entirely honest with
you. I apologize for not revealing my true feelings. I apologize, sir (a
sarcastic use of the title), for not telling you sooner that you’re a
degenerate, sadistic old man, and you can go to hell before I apologize to you
now or ever again.” Broulard smiles and says Dax is a disappointment. He
thought he was like himself, just angling for himself to get Mireau’s command. Broulard
now realizes that Dax is an idealist, and was sincere in his defense of the
men, and was not after personal ambition. He sees Dax as naive as “the village
idiot.” He tells him he “spoiled the keenness of your mind by wallowing in
sentimentality.” Broulard says they have to win a war, and the men were shot
because they didn’t fight to reach that objective. He insisted that Mireau be
made to answer for the charges against him, and then asks where has he done
anything wrong? Dax says if he doesn’t know the answer, then he pities him, for
Broulard has no empathy or compassion for others.
The
story ends with a scene at a tavern, where the host brings out a German woman.
The French soldiers at first boo, then jeer, and objectify her sexually. But
then she sings a melancholy song, as tears appear on her face. The soldiers
listen, and then the men sing along, some joining her with their own tears. The
German woman, supposedly representing the enemy, becomes a maternal symbol,
singing to them a lullaby, as if trying to soothe the frightened children
inside these men. They join in the desire for release from the anger and hatred
that rips people apart. Outside, away from the womb-like comfort of the tavern,
Dax is told that that they have been ordered back to the front. He says the men
should be given a few more minutes of escape from the realities of war.
The
next film is The Shape of Water.
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