Those who fight might lose but those who don’t fight have already lost.
-- Bertolt Brecht (opening quote of the film)
At War will pale
in comparison to Stéphane Brizé’s 2015 film The Measure of a Man, another film on sudden layoffs and its effect
on individuals and families of workers. Both
films have the team of Brizé and Oliver Gorce as co-scriptwriters. Both films have the same the same lead actor Vincent Lindon who can be subtle at times and
be realistically bursting with raw emotions at others. However, the knockout
punch at the end of the 2018 film makes the entire later film worth your time.
Strike or war at a miniscule level? |
Stéphane Brizé’s 2018 film At War creates an incredible documentary feel for much of the early
part of the film—a tale of angry factory workers facing unemployment for the
rest of their lives, in spite of an assurance from the multinational company made
several years before to the workers that their jobs would be protected. Compounding
the jolt to the workers is the fact that there are no comparable jobs available
in that region that the laid off workers can opt for. The stand-off leads to a lock-out at the
factory with striking workers demanding a face-off with the German Chief Executive
Officer of the multi-national company who had earlier assured the workers in
writing that this would not happen and who initially refuses to personally
confront the striking workers. The strikers at the factory are led by Laurent (Vincent
Lindon).
While the management is armed with data to show that they
went back on the agreed arrangement of no job cuts before they had realized the
factory was no longer competitive in the rapidly changing economic global
scenario, the striking employees note the contrasting higher dividends paid to shareholders and
increased salaries to senior employees in the same time period when the factory
was supposedly becoming non-competitive.
Brizé’s film comes alive with credible arguments from a very informed
workforce. With the help of the French government, the workers are confident of
the factory returning to profit, if they are allowed to run it rather than by
the overpaid senior staff. But do corporates handover their so-called loss-making
factories to smart workers? The subject of the film may appear to be French but
the subject is universal and contemporary in reality, in an increasingly global economy.
Laurent (Vincent Lindon) the enigmatic strike leader |
While The Measure of
a Man dealt with the fallout of economic stress of joblessness on an
upright individual, At War is an
interesting study of various types of individuals reacting differently in the
shadow of an upright leader in those conditions. British director Ken Loach explored
similar social themes in his Cannes Golden Palm winning film I, Daniel Blake (2016) and the talented
Belgian directorial team of the Dardennes brothers in their film Two Days, One Night (2014). Of course,
the best work on the subject will remain Sergei Eisenstein’s first full length Russian
silent feature film Strike (1925)
made nearly a century ago. All these films are fascinating films on the same
subject--an evergreen subject over decades. Yet each of these films are so different and thought provoking.
The remarkable difference of At War with these films is that the co-scriptwriters and the director
put the actions of the heroic and upright strike leader in parallel perspective
of Laurent turning a grandparent. The socialistic
symbolism of the childbirth within the script will not be lost on perceptive
viewers. The screenplay and direction of film are creditable as is the range of emotions displayed by actor Vincent Lindon. One of the best scenes in the film is of a staid faced and silent Laurent (Lindon) driving his car alone, visually captured by a profile shot, with a tear running down his face, at a critical point in the film's narrative.
Different faces, different attitudes |
The most appropriate description of the film is provided by the citation
of the Silver Hugo bestowed on the film’s co-scriptwriters. The citation reads that the award is for
“articulating and bringing light to an important political issue which reflects the anxiety of our contemporary society and the precariousness of our livelihood."
P.S. At War won the
Silver Hugo at the Chicago Film Festival for the Best Screenplay for the
co-scriptwriters Stéphane Brizé and Olivier Gorce. The film also won the
FIPRESCI Prize at the Palic Film Festival, Serbia and Montenegro. Director Brizés
The Measure of a Man (2015) has been reviewed earlier on this
blog as also Ken Loach’s film I, Daniel Blake (2016) and the Dardennes
brothers’ film Two Days, One Night (2014).
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