DARKEST HOUR (2017)
Directed by Joe
Wright
Perfect World
Pictures, 125 minutes, PG-13
★★
Back in 2002, the BBC declared Winston Churchill (1874-1965)
the greatest Briton of all time. He was certainly omnipresent—famed orator,
Nobel Prize winning author, military man, and the holder of just about every
governmental office imaginable, including two stints as Prime Minister
(1940-45; 1951-55). Maybe that's why several British audiences gave a standing
ovation to Darkest Hour. I, like many
others, have reservations about such unbridled hero worship, but I have none
about Darkest Hour. It is like
Churchill himself—puffed up on its own perceived importance. I say this even
though Gary Oldman won the Golden Globe's Best Actor honors for portraying
Churchill, and even though some consider this film to be a potential dark horse
to win the Best Picture Oscar.
Fiddlesticks, say I! But let's give the film credit for
doing a decent job with the situation that gives the film its title. (Churchill
never actually uttered that phrase.) It covers just 2 ½ weeks of Churchill's
time as Prime Minister—from Neville Chamberlain's resignation following
Hitler's invasion of the Low Countries on May 10, 1940, to the successful
evacuation of British troops from Dunkirk, France on June 4. It was an
extraordinary moment in history, one in which many British leaders thought the
nation's only chance for survival was to sue for peace. Churchill emerged as the
perfect wartime leader. He was prescient in warning the government of Hitler's
evil intentions, dogged in his resolve, and brilliant in his ability to craft
inspirational speeches. As Lord Halifax (Stephen Dillane) says near the end of Darkest Hour, "He mobilized the English language and sent it into battle."
This film also looks good.
Scenes in the underground war rooms, Parliament, and London streets are bathed
in sufficiently drab English hues that enhance the possibility of impending
apocalypse, and the film's closing sequence—though cinematic hyperbole—is a
stunner. Director Joe Wright also uses effective slow motion street tableaux to
capture emotions ranging from fear and dread to resolve and defiance. The
overall gloom is further deepened by physical allusions to Churchill's personal
financial woes and by the deep-furrowed petty wrangling of Parliamentarians engaged
much in political jockeying as dealing the dangers of the moment. I also credit
the film for not dodging the possibility that Churchill was an alcoholic.
(Franklin Roosevelt certainly thought so and used advisor Harry Hopkins to keep
Churchill at arm's length.) It even invites us to question Churchill's past
judgment (the bungled World War One Gallipoli campaign) and present (the decision
to sacrifice men deployed a Calais).
For all of that, Darkest Hour is at heart a cinematic
look at the Great Man Theory of history. Exaggeration, invention, a histrionic
musical score, and the dumbed-down fawning of those who sense they are in the
presence of a demigod ultimately undermine the power of the visuals. The
fawners include Churchill's deputy, Anthony Eden (Samuel West), his young
secretary Elizabeth Layton (Lily James), and his long-sacrificing wife
Clementine (Kristin Scott-Thomas doing a Sian Phillips imitation). Never mind
that Eden was actually among those who thought Britain needed to consider
throwing in the towel, that Layton didn't have a brother at Dunkirk and wouldn't
be Churchill's secretary until 1941, or that Clementine was equally invested in
Winston's legacy. Nor is there evidence that Chamberlain (Ronald Pickup) or
Halifax were plotting a party coup against Churchill. There is one scene so
preposterous that it's Disneyesque on the fantasy scale. Churchill was many
things, but a man of the people he was not. He did not, as the film would have
it, bolt from his limousine and jump on the Underground to solicit the views of
ordinary Brits, trade Macaulay passages with a black passenger, and whip the subway
car into bellicose resolve. This is ahistorical nonsense served with a PC
twist.
Just to be clear, my brief
against Darkest Hour isn't rooted in anti-Churchill
views. To repeat an earlier point, Churchill was a valiant wartime leader. Faced
with the specter of fascism, better that the leader be a tiger than a Teddy
bear. The film works best when Churchill is self-assured, arrogant, even
crude (though Oldman seemed too much like LBJ with a cigar in those scenes). I
was not enamored of attempts to soften Churchill's gruffness with avuncular interludes
in his dealings with Layton. At times, you might also think that Churchill was
the one with a stammer, not King George VI (Ben Mendelsohn).
Mainly I don't see what all
the fuss is about. If you've seen Season One of The Crown, you have witnessed a far superior portrayal of
Churchill—that of John Lithgow. Indeed, Jeremy Northam's Eden was also a better
performance, as was Jared Harris of George VI and Harriet Walker's Clementine. Joe
Wright's Darkest Hour looks good, but
it tries so hard to cover all the bases that it often feels like it's more about
21st century concerns than mid-20th century perils.
Rob Weir