A War (Denmark)

Released 2015

SUNDAY 24 JULY – 10.00 am
TUESDAY 26 JULY – 8.15 pm
RUNNING TIME 115 minutes

SYNOPSIS

Third feature from Tobais Lindhom [A Hijacking] features Pilou Asbaek as a Danish army commander in Afghanistan whose life & family are turned upside down by the fallout from a single decision made under desperate circumstances.

Review: Mark Kermode

This powerful drama about a Danish army officer on trial after his patrol suffers a traumatising loss in Afghanistan blurs boundaries between bravery and blame.
“The issue is not what you have done, but what you do now…”

Denmark’s entry for the 2015 best foreign language film Oscar is a gripping and thought-provoking affair from writer-director Tobias Lindholm that counterposes battlefronts at home and abroad. We open with an arresting, Kajaki-style sequence in which a Danish patrol in Afghanistan suffers a horrifying loss.

From here we cut to Denmark, where the family of Pilou Asbæk’s company commander Claus Michael Pedersen are awaiting his call. As the drama unfolds, moving inexorably from conflict zone to courtroom, we shift back and forth between the commander and his wife, Maria (Tuva Novotny), both of whom face potentially life-threatening situations involving the protection/endangerment of children and judgment calls made in haste.

With its handheld camerawork (by Magnus Nordenhof Jønck), sparse music cues and affectingly naturalistic performances, A War employs quasi-documentary “realism” to powerful effect. The combination of nailbiting tension and suffocating stillness that characterised A Hijacking (Kapringen) (from which key cast members return) inflects the life-and-death mundanity of the war-zone sequences, while later stages echo the communal paranoia of The Hunt (Jagten), which Lindholm co-wrote with Thomas Vinterberg.

Ultimately, this is a film about guilt, grief and accountability, the chaos of war clashing with the sterility of an after-the-fact trial as the boundaries between blame and bravery are blurred beyond resolution. Novotny is terrific as the wife and mother struggling to hold her family together as her husband is hauled over the coals, and Lindholm’s juxtaposition of images of prone children, worlds apart, is both acute and alarming.

Source: www.theguardian.com Mark Kermode 10/1/16 Last modified 22/3/2018 Edited extracts ~ accessed 8/5/21