Theme
and director’s intention:
“While
“War Horse” is, like so many of Mr. Spielberg’s films, a work
of supreme artifice, it is also a self-conscious attempt to revive
and pay tribute to a glorious tradition of honest, emotionally direct
storytelling.” -Scott
“Essentially
screenwriters Lee Hall and Richard Curtis have given us the purest
sort of love story. In structure, it follows the three-act basics of
most romantic comedies or dramas — they meet, they are separated,
they struggle to find their way back to each other.” -Sharkey
“Its
leading character is not human but a non-speaking horse, and the
structure does not fall into the conventional three acts - instead,
it is episodic and cyclical, which in many ways is more like real
life.” -Tookey
Separate
elements and their relationship to the whole:
“You
may find yourself resisting this sentimental pageant of
early-20th-century rural English life, replete with verdant fields,
muddy tweeds and damp turnips, but my strong advice is to surrender.”
-Scott
“Without
those visual theatrics, the screenwriters shift more focus on the
people that surround Joey, their worries and woes trying hard to
stack up to the noble steed's.” -Sharkey
“As
Spielberg proved with Saving Private Ryan, he is a master at
depicting warfare.” -Tookey
Objective
evaluation of the film:
“War
Horse” registers the loss and horror of a gruesomely irrational
episode in history, a convulsion that can still seem like an
invitation to despair. To refuse that, to choose compassion and
consolation, requires a measure of obstinacy, a muscular and brutish
willfulness that is also an authentic kind of grace.” -Scott
“War
— battle-hot or postwar cold, reality or fantasy — has always
brought out the best in Spielberg, and so it is with "War
Horse." -Sharkey
“Steven
Spielberg, with the help of screenwriters Lee Hall (Billy Elliot) and
Richard Curtis (Love Actually), has fashioned Michael Morpurgo’s
novel into a thoroughly moving picture.” -Tookey
Subjective
evaluation of the film:
“Allow
your sped-up, modern, movie-going metabolism, accelerated by a diet
of frantic digital confections to calm down a bit. Suppress your
instinctive impatience, quiet the snarky voice in your head and allow
yourself to recall, or perhaps to discover, the deep pleasures of
sincerity.” -Scott
“The
emotional signature of the director can be felt from the first frames
as he establishes the relationship and the mood of the piece —
there will be tears.” -Sharkey
“This
is the greatest of all equine entertainments, even surpassing such
classics as National Velvet, The Black Stallion and Seabiscuit.”
-Tookey
The
film’s level of ambition:
“Who
are we? Mr. Spielberg’s answers to this question tend to be
hopeful, and his taste for happy is frequently criticized. But his
ruthless optimism, while it has helped to make him an enormously
successful showman, is also crucial to his identity as an artist, and
is more complicated than many of his detractors realize.” -Scott
“There
is great beauty in "War Horse," great power in the
emotional journey for both boy and beast, if only Spielberg had
trusted that we would be able to read between the lines.” -Sharkey
“War
Horse has already been condemned as safe, conventional film-making,
yet it’s anything but.” -Tookey
Words
you found interesting:
folksy,
adage, emotive
Relationship
to film movements/genres/ relation to other filmmakers’ work.:
“Shot
the old-fashioned way, on actual film stock (the cinematographer is
Mr. Spielberg’s frequent collaborator Janusz Kaminski), the picture
has a dark, velvety luster capable of imparting a measure of
movie-palace magic to the impersonal cavern of your local multiplex.”
-Scott
“The
early English countryside section is evocative of John Ford’s The
Quiet Man, which was set in Ireland.” -Tookey
Works Cited
Scott, A.O.
“Innocence Is Trampled, but a Bond Endures” Rev. of War Horse,
dir. Steven Spielberg Refn. The New York Times
22 Dec. 2011
Sharkey,
Betsy. “'War Horse' is the purest sort of love story” Rev. of War
Horse, dir. Steven Spielberg Refn. Los Angeles Times
23 Dec. 2011
Tookey,
Chris. “Spectacular,
tear-jerking, uplifting: War Horse is a Spielberg masterpiece.”
Rev. of War Horse, dir. Steven Spielberg Refn. Mail Online
13 Jan. 2012
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