Sat
28/06
Jolly Cinema > 16:00
A WALK IN THE SUN
ProjectionInfo
Subtitle
Original version with subtitles
Admittance
A WALK IN THE SUN
Film Notes
“Just a little walk in the warm Italian sun” provided the basic material for one of Milestone’s greatest films of the 1940s. To be precise, the “walk” in question spans the six miles covered to capture a modest, crumbling farmhouse. During the course of the walk, the implications of heroism, country, responsibility, and camaraderie are redefined.
After the paranoid and pathetic The Purple Heart (1944), which felt almost like an apology for the Communistic excesses of The North Star, Milestone’s fifth WWII film in a row was his most accurate depiction of military absurdity since All Quiet on the Western Front. The film looks remarkably modern, with its barren landscape so stripped down it feels like watching a Dreyer film. It’s a study of faces and the psychology of characters set against a faceless (but not vilified) enemy. It’s in keeping with Milestone’s method of combining realism and stylisation, the latter so extreme as to strain credibility. The film captures the most agonising aspect of every war: the long stretches of waiting for something to happen.
Robert Rossen’s script, based on a novel by Harry Brown, includes some of the most consistently memorable dialogue written in American cinema. It stays close to the bone, reflecting the sarcastic cynicism of soldiers under duress, when fear and self-loathing feed into each other.
It was Milestone who suggested that part of the soldiers’ experience be turned into ballads sung on the soundtrack. “I got the idea from my childhood in Russia. Very often, in the town where I lived, you’d see war veterans on street corners who’d become troubadours.” The communist and soon-to-be-blacklisted Earl Robinson wrote the lyrics, which helped develop both the characters and the plot. Years later, Carl Foreman confessed to Milestone that he had lifted the idea of the ballad for High Noon.
A trace of A Walk in the Sun can be found in many war films that followed, emphasising the meaninglessness of combat and its unbearable pressures, leaving everyone with some sort of scar. In a way, in an unvarnished war film, everybody dies.
Ehsan Khoshbakht
Cast and Credits
Sog.: from the novel of the same name (1944) by Harry Brown. Scen.: Robert Rossen. F.: Russell Harlan. M.: Duncan Mansfield. Scgf.: Max Bertisch. Mus.: Freddie Rich. Int.: Dana Andrews (sergeant Bill Tyne), Richard Conte (soldier Rivera), George Tyne (soldier Friedman), John Ireland (soldier Windy), Lloyd Bridges (sergeant Ward), Sterling Holloway (McWilliams), Norman Lloyd (Archimbeau), Herbert Rudley (sergeant Porter), Richard Benedict: (soldier Tranella). Prod.: Lewis Milestone per Lewis Milestone Productions, Superior Pictures, Inc. 35mm. D.: 117’. Bn.
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