One of the most visceral documentaries about combat ever made, 3 October 2010
Howard Schumann from Vancouver, B.C.
What would make a young man who has just completed a harrowing and
brutal six month tour of duty in Afghanistan decide to return for
another stint? The answer to that question is puzzling, but it is made
a bit clearer by Janus Metz' powerful documentary Armadillo, Gran Prix
winner at the Critics Week competition at the Cannes Film Festival.
Armadillo, like Restrepo, is named for the military base where the
subjects are stationed. The film depicts the bravery and camaraderie
and also the addictive high of several Danish soldiers, seemingly just
out of their teens, that comes from their participation in the war in
Afghanistan.
Edited by Per K. Kirkegaard, Metz follows the soldiers from their
farewell party at home filled with naked strippers to their arrival at
base camp, moments of relaxation, briefings by their superiors, times
of boredom, and the combat that includes some stomach turning
sequences. The camera seems to be ever present and it hardly seems like
an understatement to say that the director and cinematographer Lars
Skee's lives were as much at risk as the soldiers. The film also
demonstrates the plight of the villagers who are afraid of Taliban
retribution if they cooperate with coalition forces. Caught in the
middle, the Afghan civilians suffer greatly, standing to lose their
crops, their animals, and their lives either from NATO forces or from
the Taliban.
What makes it even more distressing, as the film points out, the
soldiers cannot distinguish between friend and foe. When one of the
soldiers accidentally kills a young girl, all that can be offered is
compensation while the Platoon commander tells the soldier that did the
killing to shrug it off because these things happen every day. The
camera-work is up close and personal and the horrors of war perhaps
have never had such an immediate impact. We can see the look on a young
soldier's face after he has just been shot and we see decapitated
Taliban bodies being pulled from a ditch.
While the film takes no position either pro-war or anti-war, the
inhumanity of war has never been shown more clearly and the soldiers
boasting and laughter after obliterating a wounded enemy while high on
adrenaline, caused considerable debate about appropriate military
behavior back home in Denmark. Depending on your point of view the
soldiers are either making a difference or perpetuating atrocities in
an unwinnable war. What does become clear, however, is the bond formed
by the men and their lack of questioning of their mission. Like
adolescents on a drunken rampage, they are excited by the thrill of the
moment. We owe Metz a debt of gratitude for showing us the mindless,
sadistic, and dehumanizing behavior that war can induce. Armadillo
stands as one of the most visceral and frightening documentaries about
combat ever made.
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To remove first post, remove entire topic.
The danish documentary movie Armadillo is now out with subtitles.
One of the most visceral documentaries about combat ever made, 3 October 2010
Howard Schumann from Vancouver, B.C.
What would make a young man who has just completed a harrowing and
brutal six month tour of duty in Afghanistan decide to return for
another stint? The answer to that question is puzzling, but it is made
a bit clearer by Janus Metz' powerful documentary Armadillo, Gran Prix
winner at the Critics Week competition at the Cannes Film Festival.
Armadillo, like Restrepo, is named for the military base where the
subjects are stationed. The film depicts the bravery and camaraderie
and also the addictive high of several Danish soldiers, seemingly just
out of their teens, that comes from their participation in the war in
Afghanistan.
Edited by Per K. Kirkegaard, Metz follows the soldiers from their
farewell party at home filled with naked strippers to their arrival at
base camp, moments of relaxation, briefings by their superiors, times
of boredom, and the combat that includes some stomach turning
sequences. The camera seems to be ever present and it hardly seems like
an understatement to say that the director and cinematographer Lars
Skee's lives were as much at risk as the soldiers. The film also
demonstrates the plight of the villagers who are afraid of Taliban
retribution if they cooperate with coalition forces. Caught in the
middle, the Afghan civilians suffer greatly, standing to lose their
crops, their animals, and their lives either from NATO forces or from
the Taliban.
What makes it even more distressing, as the film points out, the
soldiers cannot distinguish between friend and foe. When one of the
soldiers accidentally kills a young girl, all that can be offered is
compensation while the Platoon commander tells the soldier that did the
killing to shrug it off because these things happen every day. The
camera-work is up close and personal and the horrors of war perhaps
have never had such an immediate impact. We can see the look on a young
soldier's face after he has just been shot and we see decapitated
Taliban bodies being pulled from a ditch.
While the film takes no position either pro-war or anti-war, the
inhumanity of war has never been shown more clearly and the soldiers
boasting and laughter after obliterating a wounded enemy while high on
adrenaline, caused considerable debate about appropriate military
behavior back home in Denmark. Depending on your point of view the
soldiers are either making a difference or perpetuating atrocities in
an unwinnable war. What does become clear, however, is the bond formed
by the men and their lack of questioning of their mission. Like
adolescents on a drunken rampage, they are excited by the thrill of the
moment. We owe Metz a debt of gratitude for showing us the mindless,
sadistic, and dehumanizing behavior that war can induce. Armadillo
stands as one of the most visceral and frightening documentaries about
combat ever made.
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