'War Horse' hammers home the emotions
Just in time for family-friendly holiday feel-goodery is Steven Spielberg’s sweeping, historical epic “War Horse.
“War Horse” features a strong cast and the sort of impeccable production values you would expect from Spielberg.
And yet it’s overlong, painfully earnest and sometimes even hokey. Clearly, Spielberg intended “War Horse” as a throwback, an homage to good, old-fashioned, heartrending storytelling, full of recognizable types and uplifting themes. The skies are so impossibly colorful in such a retro way, they look like hand-painted backdrops on a soundstage. And the dialogue is so frequently on-the-nose and repetitive, it might just make you cringe.
The majestic horse Joey comes into the lives of a struggling British farming family just before World War I. The alcoholic father (Peter Mullan) buys him at auction, even though he knows he can’t afford him; the long-suffering mother (Emily Watson) insists he return him and get the family’s money back. But plucky teenager Albert (good-looking newcomer Jeremy Irvine) begs to keep him and promises to train him. Cue the montage.
Although Joey is clearly a spectacular creature, the father ends up selling him to the British cavalry because the family needs the money. Albert is devastated and swears they’ll meet again; the conscientious captain (Tom Hiddleston), who immediately recognizes Joey’s greatness and chooses him as his own mount, promises to take good care of him until then.
Joey, meanwhile, thrives once more in this new setting on the front lines. And these moments are some of the film’s best — the ones where the Spielberg of “Saving Private Ryan” comes shining through.
There’s a reason so many movies get made about horses: They’re beautiful, powerful creatures, and the pounding of hooves gets your heart pounding, as well.
But speaking of Joey and his new rival, their relationship represents one of the more cloying aspects of “War Horse”: the incessant anthropomorphism of these animals. Would they really achieve a hard-won respect for each other and end up protecting one another in the thick of battle? Maybe. Maybe not. But the human assumption that they would just for the sake of furthering the narrative is sort of obnoxious.
Eventually, Joey changes hands again and ends up living on a farm with an adorable but sickly French girl (Cecile Buckens) and her doting grandfather (Niels Arestrup). But then he’s captured once more — this time by the Germans — and forced to fight again. This sets up the film’s best scene by far, in which a British soldier and a German soldier find Joey entangled in some barbed wire and work together to free him.
It’s a tense, quiet exchange that ultimately reveals some much-needed humanity, and it could have ended on just the right note — but then “War Horse” goes and ruins it by adding one line too many, just to remind us of how “remarkable” Joey is.
FILM FACTS
TITLE: “War Horse”
CAST: Jeremy Irvine, Emily Watson, Tom Hiddleston, Peter Mullan
DIRECTOR: Steven Spielberg
RATED: PG-13 for war violence, animal brutality
GRADE: ★★¹⁄₂ (out of 5)
