ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT
Sog.: from the novel of the same name (1929) by Erich Maria Remarque. Scen.: George Abbott. F.: Arthur Edeson, Karl Freund. M.: Edgar Adams, Milton Carruth. Scgf.: Charles D. Hall, W. R. Schmitt. Mus.: David Broekman. Int.: Louis Wolheim (corporal Stanislaus ‘Kat’ Katczinsky), Lew Ayres (Paul Bäumer), John Wray (Himmelstoss), Arnold Lucy (professor Kantorek), Ben Alexander (Franz Kemmerich), Scott Kolk (Leer), Owen Davis, Jr. (Peter), Walter Browne Rogers (Behn), William Bakewell (Albert Kropp). Prod.: Carl Laemmle per Universal Studios.
Silent version, 35mm. D.: 133’. Bn.
Film Notes
Like Orson Welles a decade later, Milestone, from very early on, landed himself in the most precarious position: he made a film instantly dubbed “seminal,” “classic,” and the film to end, if not all wars, then all films. As is often the case with retrospective viewing of such works, one tends to seek faults to counter those historic claims. Yet, 95 years on, there are very few weak links in All Quiet on the Western Front. For clarity, it is indeed a “masterpiece,” but more importantly, it is a guidebook to Milestone’s mise-en-scène.
Based on German author Erich Maria Remarque’s best-selling novel about a group of credulous German boys recruited as soldiers during World War I, the film is a descent into a hellscape of mud and barbed wire where whimpering boys are harvested by machine guns, flying debris reaches the lens and silences prove deadlier than the ruckus of barrage. Shot by Arthur Edeson and Karl Freund, the combat scenes feel like documentary footage. Indeed, I’ve lost count of how many documentary and fiction works have used them as stock footage. Milestone slices the screen with lines of marching soldiers and tracking shots over trenches. His window-frame shots are like Bruegel paintings reinterpreted by the Soviet formalist filmmakers of the 1920s.
Visual elements condense the novel into objects, shots, and carefully lit scenes. The ending, involving a butterfly and a reaching hand (Milestone’s own), is improvised and does not belong to the novel. The butterfly, equivalent to the “all quiet” moment in the book, has since become a symbol of the film.
The film was a huge success in many countries except in Germany, where the Berlin screening of an already censored and German-dubbed version was interrupted by the goons of a then little-known Joseph Goebbels. They released mice into the cinema and detonated stink bombs, unwittingly convincing attendees that the horrors of the trenches were all too real. That violence spread across other parts of Germany, and the film was banned until 1952. In the meantime, World War II happened.
Ehsan Khoshbakht