Mashable 2024年10月12日
'Blitz' review: Steve McQueen's World War II epic dazzles but ultimately disappoints
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史蒂夫·麦奎恩执导的二战电影《闪电战》讲述了二战期间,一位母亲和儿子在伦敦经历闪电战的故事。影片以精良的制作和紧凑的节奏展现了战争的残酷,但同时也陷入了陈词滥调,未能完全摆脱其他二战电影的影子。影片通过母亲丽塔和儿子乔治的视角,展现了二战时期伦敦的日常生活和战争带来的苦难,并探讨了种族、身份认同等重要议题。然而,影片在叙事节奏和人物塑造方面存在不足,使得部分剧情显得拖沓冗长,而一些角色的潜力也未能完全发挥。尽管如此,《闪电战》仍不失为一部值得一看的电影,它以独特的视角展现了战争的残酷与人性光辉,并为二战题材电影增添了新的思考角度。

🤔 影片通过母亲丽塔和儿子乔治的双线叙事,展现了二战时期伦敦的日常生活和战争带来的苦难。丽塔在伦敦经历了战争的残酷和生活的艰辛,而乔治则在逃离伦敦的旅程中经历了各种冒险和磨难,最终在战火中成长。

💥 影片展现了二战时期英国社会中存在的种族歧视问题。乔治作为一名混血孩子,在逃离伦敦的旅程中遭到了来自各个方面的歧视,这也反映了当时英国社会中存在的种族偏见。

⭐️ 影片以独特的视角展现了二战时期伦敦的日常生活。通过乔治的眼睛,观众看到了战争对儿童的影响,以及他们在战火中展现出的勇气和韧性。

😔 影片在叙事节奏和人物塑造方面存在不足,使得部分剧情显得拖沓冗长,而一些角色的潜力也未能完全发挥。例如,丽塔的角色缺乏深度,而乔治的成长过程也显得不够自然。

💡 影片在视觉效果方面表现出色,战争场景的刻画逼真震撼,为观众呈现了二战时期伦敦的真实景象。

🔥 影片在音乐方面也十分出色,配乐与画面完美融合,营造出紧张、悲壮的氛围,增强了影片的感染力。

🤨 影片在主题方面较为单薄,未能深入探讨战争的本质和对人性的影响。

🏆 影片的演员阵容强大,Saoirse Ronan和Elliott Heffernan的表演都十分出色,为角色注入了灵魂。

💯 总体而言,《闪电战》是一部制作精良的二战电影,它以独特的视角展现了战争的残酷与人性光辉,但同时也存在一些不足,未能完全发挥其潜力。

Blitz is what you get when you combine Oscar–winning writer/director Steve McQueen (Shame, 12 Years A Slave), the works of Charles Dickens, and the third act of Atonement. And while each of these parts may sound promising by themselves, the final combination proves frustratingly uneven.

There's no doubt that McQueen's World War II epic is among the most well-crafted films of the year, boasting some genuinely pulse-pounding sequences and lavish set pieces. But too often, this story of a mother and son weathering the Blitz in London falls into clichés that smother any elements setting it apart from other films portraying this era.

What's Blitz about?

Credit: Apple TV+

Blitz drops us into London in 1940, where air raid sirens sound nightly to warn citizens of incoming German bombers. A shortage of bomb shelters leaves throngs of Londoners stranded in the streets, calling for the government to open up the Underground stations. Amidst all this chaos, parents evacuate their children to the countryside in order to keep them safe.

One such parent is single mother Rita (Saoirse Ronan, The Outrun), who's held off as long as possible on sending her son George (newcomer Elliott Heffernan) away. When she finally relents, George is less than understanding. "I hate you," he tells her, before boarding the train out of London without a proper goodbye.

Devastated, Rita tries to go about life as usual (or as usual as life can be during wartime), working in a munitions factory and volunteering at a shelter. Little does she know that George jumped off his train to the country and is fighting his way back home to her.

Blitz toggles between Rita's day-to-day life and George's journey through London, with the occasional flashback to their family life or to Rita's time with George's Grenadian father Marcus (C.J. Beckford). These parallel stories play out in fragmented chapters, with neither mode of storytelling quite gelling with the other. Rita remains relatively static in London, allowing McQueen to hit on some standard WWII film tropes like a BBC broadcast to boost morale or a night out singing in the face of adversity.

George, on the other hand, experiences a true Dickensian odyssey. He'll cross paths with a number of characters ranging from kindly Nigerian night watchman Ife (Benjamin Clementine) to a group of street thieves led by the almost comically evil Albert (Stephen Graham) and Beryl (Kathy Burke), who force George to join up in what might be the film's most Oliver Twist-inspired section. But with so much going on in Rita and George's worlds, Blitz barely finds time to let its most interesting elements breathe.

Blitz's George shows WWII-era London through a perspective not often seen in film.

Credit: Apple TV+

Most of these elements come from our time with George, as we experience the Blitz from his childish perspective. The barrage of bombs obviously presents a mortal danger to him, but there are other obstacles for a nine-year-old around every corner that an adult may not bat an eye at. In one of the film's funniest scenes, for example, George does his best to take in a very complicated set of bus directions — a sweet detail that emphasizes just how very small he is in the scale of this conflict.

George's relationship to race also makes for one of Blitz's most poignant throughlines. Half-Grenadian, and the only Black child on the train out of London, George experiences racism from everyone, from his fellow evacuees to shopkeepers who shoo him away. These instances puncture the idea of British unity in the face of the Blitz, a reminder that the motivational wartime slogan to "keep calm and carry on" also extends to the carrying-on of ugly behaviors.

Yet George finds camaraderie in his journey as well, as Clementine's Ife gently prompts George to reconsider his ideas of Blackness. The two meet in the Empire Arcade, a covered walkway lined with racist caricatures of Black men and women. It's evident George buys into these depictions somewhat: He laughs at Ife's Yoruba name and tells him that he doesn't think of himself as Black. But the time Ife and George spend together clearly makes an impact on him, making for one of Blitz's most quietly affecting sections. Given how World War II films predominantly center white perspectives, George's journey of self-discovery is not only a moving examination of identity but a necessary addition to the genre.

Blitz is beautiful, but often relies on clichés.

Credit: Apple TV+

It's a shame, then, that George's story and the holes it punches in the mythology surrounding the Blitz are often overshadowed by clichés that uphold that very mythology. Among these are multiple rousing bomb shelter speeches. Even Ife gets in on the action, with a monologue about how racism and division within one shelter is no different than what the Germans want — an on-the-nose sentiment that somewhat undercuts the film's prior handling of the subject. But as McQueen leans into genre staples like these speeches, or Rita running after George's train as it departs, or a harrowing underground flooding sequence (hello, Atonement PTSD), perhaps that embrace of the Blitz mythology is the point. Even if that stoic Blitz spirit really did exist, was there room in it for those white UK citizens considered "other"?

As McQueen grapples with this question, he also brings the Blitz to stunning life with tried-and-true tricks frequently seen in WWII movies. The bombed streets of London blaze with orange flames, while German aircraft loom overhead in the pitch-black night. Long one-take shots make sure we duck and weave through the action alongside George, positioning us firmly in his point of view as he's overwhelmed with the chaos. Booming sound design featuring air raid sirens and the deep rumble of bombs evokes chills.

Yet among all that fairly familiar imagery are some distinctive sequences that make you wish McQueen had taken more risks with Blitz. The opening focuses on an out-of-control firehose thrashing around on a burning street, a promise of chaos to come. The blur of the oceans beneath the German planes melds into a field of black-and-white daisies. A standout long take guides us through a joyous night at a dance hall, only to cut to its bombed-out remains moments later. If Blitz's story sometimes falters, at least these moments are riveting to experience.

The same goes for many of Blitz's performances. Ronan imbues Rita with both magnificent warmth and deep worry for her son, and Heffernan shines in his breakout role, bringing a still thoughtfulness to even the most harrowing scenes. Graham and Burke are delightfully fun as thieving villains, and Clementine grounds his scenes with George in a firm, quiet kindness. However, some members of the ensemble feel unfortunately underused: Harris Dickinson (Babygirl) gets very little to do as pining fireman Jack, and Leigh Gill's (Joker: Folie à Deux) shelter marshall Mickey is instantly magnetic, yet mostly presented as an avatar of Blitz heroics.

The untapped potential of these cast members speaks to Blitz's largest problem: It feels like it's trying to be too many movies at once. The film crams so much into its two-hour runtime — from munitions factory tensions to precocious runaway children to the barest hints of romance — that by the time it reaches its sweet, yet slightly perfunctory-feeling ending, you'll feel as if you've dipped your toes in several beautifully rendered perspectives of the Blitz, yet fully inhabited very few.

Blitz was reviewed out of the New York Film Festival. It hits theaters Nov. 1, then premieres on Apple TV+ Nov. 22.

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二战 史蒂夫·麦奎因 闪电战 伦敦 战争电影
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