Paths of Glory (1957)
Director: Stanley Kubrick
Cast: Kirk Douglas, George McGready, Adolphe Menjou
Runtime:88 minutes
WWI was a senseless war. The crown prince of Austria
Hungary and his wife were assassinated by a Serb, which caused Austria Hungary
to declare war on Serbia, and as a result its ally Germany did the same too.
Russia joined its ally Serbia’s side. Britain and France joined on Russia’s
side, Turkey on Germany’s side and very
soon nearly all of Europe was pitted against each other, sacrificing thousands
of its fine men to gain few hundred yards of enemy territory. Initially
something that was to last till Christmas 1914 stretched till 1918, and led to
the loss of 10 million soldiers and an untold number of civilian casualties.
This war introduced the world to horrors of modern warfare, and made changes to
the world politics and geography, the effects of which continue till today. It
ended aristocracy in most of Europe for good, accelerated the development of
technology, most prominently in aircraft, but at the same time made way for the
rise of fascism and communism and set the foundation stone for military industrial
complex and global warfare.
Unlike WWII, its not captured that well in the medium of
cinema or literature. There are a very prominent books or even films which come
to the mind that depicted various battles of WWI. But one film comes to the
mind prominently, which captures the senseless carnage that was a part of the
trench warfare.
In
one sentence, Paths of Glory is about an idealistic army officer in the French
army trying to save three soldiers of his unit sentenced wrongly to death for
cowardice. It is based on the novel of the same name by Humphrey Cobb .
The film itself is based loosely on the true story of four French soldiers, executed in 1915
during World War I under General Géraud Réveilhac for failure to follow orders.
It addresses the practice of selecting individuals at random and
executing them as a punishment for the sins of the whole group, not very
different from the decimation system used by the Roman army.
The
film begins with a voiceover describing the trench warfare situation of World
War I up to 1916, where Germany and France are bitterly fighting each other for
two years now. Major General Broulard (Adolphe
Menjou), a
member of the French General Staff, asks his subordinate, Brigadier Mireau (George
Macready), to
send one of his regiments on a suicide mission to take a well-defended German
position called the "Anthill." Mireau initially refuses, citing
the impossibility of the mission and loss of life of his men, but when Broulard
mentions a potential promotion, Mireau subtlety changes his opinion that the
attack will succeed.
Mireau
gives the detailed planning and the execution of the attack to the 701st
Regiment’s Colonel Dax (Kirk
Douglas), who
protests that this will only lead to half of his men getting killed, as they
are ill equipped for the task and infact are looking to be relieved after
facing prolonged action. Mireau dismisses his pleas and tells that such losses
are unavoidable, and orders that the attack be carried out at dawn the very
next day, with barely a fifteen minute artillery cover. ( En route to
meeting Dax while inspecting the trenches, Mireau throws a traumatised soldier
out of the regiment for showing signs of shell shock, which he dismisses as cowardice). Dax sends a reconnaissance
mission under the habitual drunk Lt Roget, who takes Corporal Paris and a
soldier along him to the enemy lines. He sends the soldier ahead to scout, when
the scout doesn’t return, he gets nervous and lobs a grenade and retreats. Cpl
Paris find that the scout was killed by the grenade. He confronts Roget, but
Roget brags that he can’t prove anything against an officer and files a false
report to Col Dax.
The attack on the ‘’anthill’’ commences next day at dawn, with Dax personally
leading the first wave of his regiment. It is a disaster, with none of the men
reaching the German line and most being wiped out. B and C companies cannot
even leave their trench due to German artillery and machine gun fire. Brigadier
Mireau who is watching everything, gets furious and orders his artillery
commander to open fire on his own men to force them into battle. The artillery
commander Capt Rousseau refuses any such action without a written order which
Mireau refuses to give. Meanwhile, Dax
returns to the trenches, and tries to rally B Companyfor one last push, but as
he climbs out of the trench, the body of a dead French soldier knocks him down.
The remaining soldiers of the first wave, meanwhile retreat.
The catastrophe makes Mireau panic, and to shift the blame
he blames Dax’s regiment of cowardice (which Dax dismisses angrily) and
proposes to Broulard to court martial 100 men. Broulard instead persuades him
to bring down the number to three, one from each company. Mireau privately threatens
Dax with dire consequences if he goes ahead with the matter. Dax unwillingly
asks his subordinate company commanders to pick a man each. Corporal Paris is
chosen by Lt Roget to keep him from testifying about his actions in the
scouting mission. Private Ferol is picked by his commanding officer
because he is a "social undesirable." The last man, Private Arnaud ,
is chosen randomly by lot.
Dax, who was a criminal defense lawyer in civilian life,
volunteers to defend the men at their court-martial. The court martial is
however a show trial, with the verdict almost predecided even before Dax makes
his opening statement. Dax is not allowed to present any evidence which may be
useful in absolving the condemned men, even in case of Arnaud who has
been cited for bravery twice previously. The men too are not allowed to give
any explaination. Dax gives a moving closing argument that this trail makes him
ashamed to be a human, and that the members of the court will rue condemning
the men till their dying day. The men are nevertheless condemned to be shot on
the subsequent day.
Both Dax and the condemned men are flabbergasted. Dax
summons Lt Roget and to his horror, makes him incharge of the next day's
execution of the three men. Just then, the
artillery commander Capt Rousseau (who had refused Mireau's order to fire on
his own men) arrives to give his report to Dax. Dax rushes to meet Broulard,
who has thrown a grand banquet for the top brass and politicians, and makes his
plea to Broulard, but he supports the sentence to be carried out saying that
the best way to
maintain discipline is to shoot a man now and then.) Dax then tries to
blackmail him into sparing the men's life by showing the signed
report attesting to Mireau's order to shell his own trenches. Broulard
accepts the statement, and curlty dismisses Dax.
In
the prison cell, the three men take the last few hours of life differently.
Arnaud spends it in drinking, Paris and Ferol in trying to be calm
unsuccessfully. The men receive a roast duck meal from Mireau, which is nothing
but an added insult. When a priest arrives to console them, Arnaud loses his
temper and attacks him, prompting Paris to hit him back which gives him a fatal
skull fracture. The authorities nevertheless give him sedatives and confirm that
the execution will happen as planned.
**spoilers**
The next morning, the three condemned men are led out into
a courtyard, among soldiers from all three companies and senior officers.
Arnaud is carried out on a stretcher and tied to the execution post. A sobbing
Ferol is blindfolded. Paris is offered a blindfold by Roget, but refuses. Roget
meekly apologizes to Paris for his
actions . All three men are then shot by the firing squad.
The next morning, Dax visits, invited by Broulard , who is
having breakfast with the gloating Mireau (Your men died wonderfully, he tells
Dax). Broulard then reveals that Mireau will be investigated for the order to
fire on his own men, as Dax has the whole report with sworn witnesses
confirming the same. Mireau leaves angrily, protesting that he has been made a
scapegoat (after unsuccessfully trying to discredit Dax). Broulard then offers
Mireau's command to Dax, assuming that Dax's attempts to stop the executions
were a ploy to gain Mireau's job. Dax, who by now has realised that this whole
plan to attack the ‘’anthill’’ was infact a ploy by Broulard to get rid of the
foolhardy Mireau, cannot hold back his disgust any longer, and calls Broulard a
"degenerate, sadistic old man." Discovering that Dax is in fact
sincere, Broulard angrily rebukes him for his idealism and equates him with a
village idiot, telling that everything possible has to be done to win wars. He
tells him that hes done no wrong to have the men shot and at the same time put
an enquiry on Mireau . Dax replies that because he finds nothing wrong in his
actions, he is a pitiable person.
The last scene of the film shifts few days later, where the remnants of Dax’s regiment are
having a gala time at the inn. A captured German woman is brought in front of
them by the innkeeper who goads her to sing. The soldiers become wild,
whistling and jeering the woman. The woman starts to sing Der Treue Hussar (a
sentimental song about a soldier who fights hard and comes home to find his
beloved dead) and immediately the mood changes, with the soldiers joining her
in singing, many openly weeping. Unknown to them, Dax is watching this from
outside, finally content that atleast something is still right. The sergeant
reports to him informing that the men have been ordered back to the front
immediately. Dax tells him to give the
men a few more minutes while his face hardens as he returns to his quarters.
*spoilers end*
The title of the film comes from a few lines of poem "Elegy Written in a Country
Churchyard".
The
boast of heraldry, the pomp of power,
And all that beauty, all that wealth ever gave,
Awaits alike the inevitable hour.
The paths of glory lead but to the grave.
With this film, Stanley Kubrick entered in the league of
great directors , never to leave it again. Its noteworthy that he made just 13
over his 45 year career, and never won any major awards. Kubrick has used black
and white as the medium to shoot the film, to underline the bleakness of war.
He has pushed the anti war narrative in the most effective manner, showing the
conscripted soldiers as nothing but sugar or salt grains that the generals
sprinkle on their tables. The
film was banned in France until 1974 for its "unflattering" depiction
of the French military, and was censored by the Swiss Army until 1970.
There
is virtually no background music used, hence not glorifying the act of war.The
dialogues too are very simple but very effective. Perhaps the most brilliant
aspect of direction is that no German
soldier is ever shown, underlining the impersonal nature of war where nine
times out of ten, soldiers do not know who they are killing or who is killing
them. The battle scene is shot brilliantly, and is hard to watch, even in
today’s era of CGI generated blood and gore. The camerawork is superb, eg: long
wide shots are used for the generals opulent HQ and close shots are used to
show the cramped space in the trenches (In days leading upto WWI, officers came
from aristocracy and the soldiers from working and poor), or that during the
attack scene, the camera hovers very close to the soldiers , giving it a
‘’newsreel’’ effect. The very last scene which is a contrast to all that went
before it, and offers some consolation to the viewer. No happy ending is shown,
because there was almost none for people who fought the great war. Dax’s
remaining army is summoned back to the front, its weaker than before, most of
the killed being replaced by very young or middle aged men (which again is
Kubrick’s genius to portray how war destroys an entire generation of able
bodied men, France lost 10% of its adult male population in the great war), and
this time, the remaining men and even Dax may not survive. Broulard will retire
in glory, and by the war’s end may
design more anthill like suicidal attacks to get rid of undesirable commanders
and replace them with agreeable ones.
Nearly six decades after the film’s released, there is yet to be a similar feature which portrays the injustice, shows the futility of idealism and highlights the anti war sentiment all at once in a runtime lesser than 90 minutes.
Nearly six decades after the film’s released, there is yet to be a similar feature which portrays the injustice, shows the futility of idealism and highlights the anti war sentiment all at once in a runtime lesser than 90 minutes.
Kirk
Douglas carries this film on his shoulders effortlessly as the idealistic and
dutiful Colonel Dax (his first name, strangely isn’t given in film),The viewer
literally feels his anguish, having unwillingly led his men to massacre pursuing a target
that he knows cannot be taken, and zealously defending scapegoated men in a
morally corrupt court-martial hearing that he knows he cannot win. Adolphe Menjou and George McGready have smaller roles in
comparison, but they superbly portray the cunning Broulard and the brutal
foolhardy Mireau, respectively. Their pompousness and hollow and cruel logic,
from treating soldiers as cannon fodder to indulging in opulence while the men
in trenches cant get decent food, fills the viewers with disgust. Its a pity
that Douglas and Kubrick participated in just one more project, Spartacus
(1960) before falling apart.
The
film is not even 90 minutes long, but speaks more than a load of documentaries
put together. It is certainly the best WWI film made, and I dare to rate it
ahead of Lawrence of Arabia. 88 minutes of cinema never meant more.
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