Friday 16 August 2024

Reflections on characters and themes in “Civil War”

 

Reflections on “Civil War”

Written and directed by Alex Garland

Starring Kirsten Dunst, Cailee Spaeny, Wagner Moura

and Stephen McKinley Henderson

 


A video presentation of this material is available here.

Intense, unidirectional, visceral and graphically violent, “Civil War” presents us with a warning of potential consequences of political, social and moral division, taken to extreme yet ominously plausible.

In the context of the film, we learn that the President of the USA is dictatorial and has acted outwith the terms of the Constitution in that, among other things, he is serving a third term, has disbanded the FBI and has fired upon his own citizens to bring them under control. We hear the President claim democratic authority under the Constitution and the broader legal system yet he appears to be undermining and spurning restrictions and regulations set out in the same Constitution he has sworn to uphold.

It is implied the President has abandoned rule by law and principle in favour of personal entitlement, judgement and preference. He applies personal perception and acumen rather than apply a considered overview in which varying points of view are respected.

As a result of this attitude at the top of government, numerous blinkered, narrow-minded and self-serving individuals are willing to act on their own beliefs and convictions and they rationalise positions and manipulate situations and language to justify dubious, amoral and criminal behaviour.

The President and his supporters are opposed by the Western Forces, a coalition whose intention it is to remove the President from power. Opposition appears to be based on democratic order and principles but in the face of amoral, brutal and remorseless attacks and attitudes, they must engage the enemy using similar tactics.

Eventually, divisions have become so deep and entrenched, and experience and pain so overwhelming, that each side has lost sight of argument and reason and resorts to action without recourse to discussion. It becomes a matter of shoot first and ask questions later as all participants seek to survive and impose their view.

There are shocking, awful and disquieting scenes in which victims are tortured, beaten and murdered, often without hesitation or consideration on the part of the aggressor. This, we may assume, is the consequence of the abandonment of objective justice and laws, replaced by partisan beliefs and skewed views, including personal acts of revenge and retribution, now apparently validated by manipulation and simple dismissal of principle and values at the top of government.

This may also suggest that “civilisation” may be little more than a high-minded façade behind which lie profound selfishness and self-indulgence that require little encouragement to come to the fore.

We witness unbridled and brutal destruction and devastation and thus become aware of the fragility of the order, culture and even the very buildings that we take to be established and eternal, yet here we see and understand how easily and quickly these pillars of progress and society can be undermined and destroyed without due care and attention to their maintenance.

The events of the film are seen through the eyes of and conveyed by a party of journalists. Presumably journalists have been chosen as our eyes and ears because, at their best, journalists seek and promote the apportioning of responsibility and accountability based on truth, fact and balanced investigation.

Lee, Joel, Jessie and Sammy represent varying ages, experience and reactions to what they witness but all are committed to the cause of truth and accountability as they set out to interview the President before he is besieged by the Western Forces who are making rapid progress and are closing in on Washington.

All are determined and hardened to some extent, though Lee appears disillusioned and even slightly detached, that is until they become personally involved in events and go through horror and distress first hand, as opposed to maintaining a professional distance.

They lose friends and witness brutal and terrifyingly casual executions of colleagues, and in a sense we in the audience share their horror and loss as we have developed a rapport with and an understanding of these characters and, though we have already witnessed dreadful events and cruelty, the victims in these events were unknown to us while now we share the loss of friends and colleagues and the pain that inflicts.

Lee is particularly traumatised and her detachment crumbles as she is forced to live the pain and loss she has for so long merely reported, but previously she was able to hide behind a façade of professionalism and professional application.

Indeed, there may even be doubt as to her desire to go on in this messed-up cauldron of misery as she saves young Jessie but fails to apply the very advice she gave to her protégée regarding keeping low when under fire.

Perhaps she had lost hope in humanity.

Curiously, despite all the gruesome and heartless violence, the film ends on a note of political hope in spite of the dystopian atmosphere and the crushing indictment of man’s inhumanity to man, a trait which may lie beneath our fine aspirations to principle, values and humanity.

Fast-paced with exceptional performances and gripping direction, “Civil War” is something of a concept film which drives hard and fast toward its destination and leaves its audience virtually beaten into submission. Perhaps the producers hoped this tactic would prove all the more effective in persuading its audience of the dangers and consequences of the path of division and conflict we appear to be following at present.

Of course, the ultimate irony is that this film is likely to appeal only to those already convinced by the observations and viewpoint behind its premise. Sadly, while art may capture truth, reality frequently resists learning from it.

 


My thanks for taking the time to read this article. I hope you found it of some value.

Stuart Fernie (stuartfernie@yahoo.co.uk)

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