Directed by:
Tobias LindholmScreenplay:
Tobias LindholmCinematography:
Magnus Nordenhof JønckComposer:
Sune Rose WagnerCast:
Pilou Asbæk, Tuva Novotny, Søren Malling, Charlotte Munck, Dar Salim, Dulfi Al-Jabouri, Cecilie Elise Søndergaard, Adam Chessa, Andreas Buch Borgwardt (more)VOD (1)
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Company commander Claus Michael Pedersen (Pilou Asbæk) and his men are stationed in an Afghan province. Meanwhile, back in Denmark, Claus' wife Maria (Tuva Novotny) is trying to hold everyday life together with a husband at war and three children missing their father. During a routine mission, the soldiers are caught in heavy crossfire and in order to save his men, Claus makes a fateful decision that leads to a tragedy that could seriously affect his military career and family life. (StudioCanal UK)
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Reviews (7)
If I try to put myself in the situation of the main character played by the great Pilou Asbæk, I would fight the most brutal battle with my conscience. I have a feeling the same was true for him. This film raises a number of disturbing questions but provides no clear-cut answers to any of them. Perhaps it is because there is no clear answer to them. (70%) ()
An honest Scandinavian drama that pretends to be a war movie but in reality, is a prime example of Scandinavian depression in the lives of ordinary people. I am not giving it a full score only because the whole case seemed absurd to me. I would give the DA a few slaps and send her to the Taliban for a few weeks just so she would know what she was actually defending. She was so annoying during the whole movie that I was hoping for Clausʼs innocence. And when you don’t accept the main premise of the movie it’s hard to give it five stars. ()
A well-made story about what the responsibility of soldiers actually is and what their decisions are, or rather, what the consequences of their decisions are. The film focuses quite well on how it's possible to connect conventional life with military life, that even those who are soldiers are really just people. It's a slightly different view, more intimate. ()
Can a war criminal be a good person? This time Lindholm asks more such questions without any unambiguous answers. In fact, it seems to me that the main purpose of A War is not to present a character study of a man losing his moral integrity or an account of a war that has no winners or losers, but rather the creation of a complex situation without a simple solution, as the film was apparently shot in response to the increasingly frequent (and dangerous) translation of serious problems into emotional rants and simple slogans. As is his habit, Lindholm, for the purpose of maximum authenticity, first builds a believable setting (though the film was shot in Turkey, Jordan and Spain, most of the soldiers were played by men who had actually served in Afghanistan and the natives by Afghan refugees from Helmand province) and subsequently has the actors react to the situations that arise (based on actual events). The director and the rest of the professionals on the crew thus found themselves in the position of outsiders, which may have partly contributed to the humble approach to the theme. With the exception of a few scenes that attempt to convey basic information (showing how far Denmark is from Afghanistan on the map), Lindholm does not try to (overly) explain the world depicted in the film or to ascribe any kind of meaning to it from the outside so that it could easily fit into some sort of narrative template. Drama is thoroughly subordinated to the realistic effect. At the same time, the film manages to draw in the viewer with its focus on the course of events. We are constantly kept in a state of anticipation as to what the depicted trial will lead to. As the opening explosion indicates, banality can at any time turn into a fight for life. We feel these twists very intensely thanks also to the camera glued to the actors throughout the entire first half, crouching like war reporters at ground level during a firefight, for example. The camera maintains a greater distance from the characters in the second half, when viewers also find themselves in the role of the judge who is supposed to pass judgment on Claus based on the previously provided “evidentiary material”. We may or may not agree with the verdict reached in the film – with the way the scene is shot, Lindholm himself does not judge, but rather leaves the decision up to us. As with his earlier films, we are forced to reassess events in light of things that happen later. The juxtaposition of those events, presupposing our willingness to think beyond what is explicitly stated, gives the film an element of powerful ambiguity. 80% ()
What can an individual do in a world where the category of morality melts into a completely opaque web of emotions, power and subordination...? Lindholm once again captures the ambivalence of the contemporary world in all its nudity and with the utter creative coldness of an individual whom he consistently controls, all whilst not missing the finest nuances. After the moment when the key dialogue of the main characters occurs after the incredible tension of the first half, which is divided between the front and the background, which the director leaves in silence behind the glass, I had no doubt that I was watching Lindholm's best film. Incredibly complex, humble, and, in the best sense of the word, engaging. Beyond good and evil, beyond bad and correct... we live in a world where the greatest struggle can take place in the silence of the garden of a family home. An inconspicuous, all the more fundamental masterpiece. ()
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Photo © Per Arnesen
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