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Bastards, brothers, and unjust warriors: Enmity and ethics in Just War Cinema
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 September 2016
Abstract
How do members of the general public come to regard some uses of violence as legitimate and others as illegitimate? And how do they learn to use widely recognised normative principles in doing so such as those encapsulated in the laws of war and debated by just war theorists? This article argues that popular cinema is likely to be a major source of influence especially through a subgenre that I call ‘Just War Cinema’. Since the 1950s, many films have addressed the moral drama at the centre of contemporary Just War Theory through the figure of the enemy in the Second World War, offering often explicit and sophisticated treatments of the relationship between the jus ad bellum and the jus in bello that anticipate or echo the arguments of philosophers. But whereas Cold War-era films may have supported Just War Theory’s ambitions to shape public understanding, a strongly revisionary tendency in Just War Cinema since the late 1990s is just as likely to thwart them. The potential of Just War Cinema to vitiate efforts to shape wider attitudes is a matter that both moral philosophers and those concerned with disseminating the law of war ought to pay close attention to.
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References
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22 Clive Stafford Smith, Director of Reprieve, recently suggested: ‘If you ask people which wars of the 20th century were genuinely worth fighting, most of them would say, only the second world war. We have a collective psychosis that war can solve problems. To that extent, movies [that reinforce this idea] can be dangerous’ (in Henry Barnes, ‘Death from above’, Guardian G2 (15 April 2016), pp. 4–7 (p. 7).
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24 Mitchell and Webb, ‘Nazis’, The Very Best of the Secret Policeman’s Ball, p. 384.
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26 By contrast with Matthew Evangelista’s rich analysis in Gender, Nationalism and War: Conflict on the Movie Screen (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011), I’m particularly interested in films as a possible influence on public attitudes.
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36 Dirs Ken Annakin, Andrew Marton, and Bernhard Wicki (DVD), (UK: Twentieth-Century Fox Home Entertainment, 1962).
37 Dir. Richard Attenborough, prod. Joseph E. Levine (DVD), (UK: MGM Home Entertainment, 1977). There are some similarities in the treatment of Anthony Quayle’s character in J. Lee Thompson’s Ice Cold in Alex (1958).
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41 Written by Alan Bleasedale and directed by Uwe Janson (BBC2 broadcast, 2011).
42 Walzer also discusses the Laconia (Just and Unjust Wars, pp. 157–61).
43 Lev, Twentieth-Century Fox, p. 187. A similar scene occurs in The Desert Rats (1953). Cf. Walzer, Just and Unjust Wars, p. 38.
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46 In The Sinking of the Laconia, Hartenstein declares, ‘I have no political role, or actually interest … I have no concern but the safeguarding of my nation and the safety of those under my command.’
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48 Quoted in Walzer, Just and Unjust Wars, p. 39. Compare the translation in Vitoria, On the Law of War, p. 311.
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50 I make no claim, one way or the other, as to the validity of this argument. I assert only that it is an argument and, moreover, a sophisticated one.
51 Cf. Walzer, Just and Unjust Wars, p. 21.
52 Vitoria, On the Law of War, pp. 307–8; McMahan, Killing in War, p. 65.
53 The Big Red One: the Reconstruction, dir. Samuel Fuller, prod. Gene Corman (DVD), (UK: Warner Bros Entertainment Inc., 2004).
54 Cf. Walzer, Just and Unjust Wars, p. 36.
55 Dombrowski, Lisa, The Films of Samuel Fuller: If You Die, I’ll Kill You (Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 2008), p. 189 Google Scholar.
56 Richard Schickel, Audio Commentary on The Big Red One.
57 Cf. Private Doll’s voiceover in Terence Malick’s The Thin Red Line (1998): ‘I killed a man. Worst thing you can do … Nobody can touch me for it’. ([Blu-ray] UK: Twentieth-Century Fox Home Entertainment). Thanks to an anonymous reader for suggesting this example.
58 Again, cf. Walzer, Just and Unjust Wars, p. 41.
59 On the difficulties determining war’s beginning and ending (especially the Second World War) and the legal implications for criminal cases, see Dudziak, Mary L., War Time: an Idea, its History, its Consequences (New York: Oxford University Press, 2012)Google Scholar, ch. 2.
60 Rousseau, J.-J., The Social Contract (1762) in The Social Contract and Other Later Political Writings, ed. Victor Gourevitch (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997)Google Scholar, book I, ch. 4; cf. Kutz, ‘The difference uniforms make’.
61 Judge, Michael, ‘A Hollywood Icon Lays Down the Law’: interview with Clint Eastwood, Wall Street Journal (29 January 2011)Google Scholar, available at: {http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052748703293204576106080298279672} accessed March 2016.
62 Ebert, Roger, ‘“All War Stories Are Told By Survivors”: an Interview With Samuel Fuller’ (17 August 1980), available at: {www.rogerebert.com/interviews/all-war-stories-are-told-by-survivors-an-interview-with-samuel-fuller}Google Scholar accessed April 2016.
63 In Judge, ‘A Hollywood Icon Lays Down the Law’.
64 Cf. Walzer, Just and Unjust Wars, p. 36; on duress as an excuse, see McMahan, Killing in War, sections 3.2.1 and 3.3.2.
65 A Bridge Too Far also shows paratroopers meeting the dazed and smiling escaped inmates of a mental hospital.
66 Rachel Cooke, interview with Samuel Maoz, Israeli film director, The Observer (2 May 2010), pp. 18–20 (p. 20).
67 Harries, Rhiannon, ‘A ship goes down, but Bleasdale’s writing wins the day for BBC drama’, The Independent (9 January 2011)Google Scholar, available at: {http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/tv/reviews/the-sinking-of-the-laconia-bbc2-thursday-amp-fridaysun-sex-and-suspicious-parents-bbc3-monday-2179621.html}.
68 Schmitt, Carl, The Concept of the Political, trans. George Schwab (Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1996), pp. xxiiGoogle Scholar, 54, 79. On the psychological tendency to demonise enemies in war, see Hume, David, A Treatise of Human Nature, ed. David Fate Norton and Mary J. Norton (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2007)Google Scholar, 2.2.3.2 (though cf. 2.2.5.10 on respect for POWs).
69 Dir. Steven Spielberg (DVD), (UK: Paramount Home Entertainment, 1998).
70 Dir. David Ayer (Blu-ray), (UK: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, 2014).
71 Neff, Stephen C., War and the Law of Nations: a General History (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005), pp. 46–47 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; on ambiguity between ‘just war’ and ‘holy war’ in medieval thought, see Russell, Frederick H., The Just War in the Middle Ages (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1975), p. 2 Google Scholar.
72 Cf. Oliver Cromwell’s speech in Schmitt, The Concept of the Political, pp. 67–8, on ‘that enmity that is in him against whatsoever is of God’. Philip French notes that the actress who plays the elderly Ryan’s wife as he visits a war grave previously played the angel who welcomed the souls of fallen Allied soldiers to heave in A Matter of Life and Death (1946), perhaps further reinforcing the theology. See French, ‘Ryan’s slaughter’, The Observer (13 September 1998), available at: {http://www.theguardian.com/film/News_Story/Critic_Review/Observer/0,4267,36480,00.html} accessed April 2016. John Hodgkins suggests the references to God reflect George Bush Sr’s religious rhetoric ( Hodgkins, John, ‘In the wake of Desert Storm: a consideration of modern World War II Films’, Journal of Popular Film and Television, 30:2 (2002), pp. 74–84 CrossRefGoogle Scholar (p. 77).
73 Hodgkins, ‘In the wake of Desert Storm’, p. 77. Weber (Imagining America at War), argues that a particular conception of the family is offered in US cinema as what American soldiers are fighting for which sheds some light on the way Ryan provokes audience indignation at German aggression (threatening ‘sons’ and ‘husbands’).
74 Pat Reid, ‘Empire Essay: Saving Private Ryan’, Empire Magazine (1 January 2000), available at: {http://www.empireonline.com/movies/empire-essay-saving-private-ryan-2/review/} accessed April 2016.
75 On apparent interchangeability of individual enemies in Ryan, see Morris, The Cinema of Steven Spielberg, p. 293.
76 Reid, ‘Empire Essay’.
77 French, ‘Ryan’s slaughter’. Early in Band of Brothers, Ronald Speirs executes German prisoners, establishing an ambiguous character that his comrades (and through them, the audience) eventually learn to admire. In Pacific too Eugene Sledge progresses from restraint to vengeance against enemy soldiers.
78 Gabbard, Krin, ‘Saving Private Ryan too late’, in John Lewis (ed.), The End of Cinema as we Know It: American Cinema in the Nineties (London: Pluto Press, 2001), p. 123 Google Scholar.
79 Elshtain, Jean Bethke, ‘On beautiful souls, Just Warriors, and feminist consciousness’, Women’s Studies International Forum, 5:3–4 (1982), pp. 341–348 CrossRefGoogle Scholar. In the German television series, Generation War (2013), Friedhelm Winter undergoes a similar transformation from the ‘poet’ to war criminal.
80 Pace Morris, The Cinema of Steven Spielberg, pp. 294–5. The phrase is from Hodgkins, ‘In the wake of Desert Storm’, p. 78.
81 Ouran, D. L., ‘Evil Ryan’, Sight and Sound (1 March 1999), p. 64 Google Scholar.
82 Ebert, ‘Review of Saving Private Ryan’. On Ryan’s permissive ethos and the escalation from executing soldiers ‘spontaneously’ to doing so ‘calculatedly’, see Morris, The Cinema of Steven Spielberg, p. 292.
83 Cf. Gates, Philippa, ‘“Fighting the Good Fight”: the real and the moral in the contemporary Hollywood combat film’, Quarterly Review of Film and Video, 22:4 (2005), pp. 297–310 CrossRefGoogle Scholar (p. 307). See also Morris, The Cinema of Steven Spielberg, p. 281.
84 Emphasis added.
85 (Blu-ray), (UK: Universal Pictures UK, 2009). Tarantino misspells the words of his title to distinguish it from Enzo G. Castellari’s film, released in the US as The Inglorious Bastards (1978). Tarantino’s film includes various nods towards the earlier movie and to the wider ‘Inglorious Bastards’ genre with which he associates it along with Robert Aldrich’s The Dirty Dozen (1967). See ‘A Conversation with Enzo Castellari and Quentin Tarantino’ on Inglorious Bastards (DVD), (UK: Optimum Releasing Ltd, 2009).
86 On the reception of Inglourious as ‘Jewish revenge porn’ as well as sources criticising the film along these lines, see Ornella, Alexander Darius, ‘Disruptive violence as a means to create space for reflection: Thoughts on Tarantino’s attempts at audience irritation’, in Robert von Dassanowsky (ed.), Inglourious Basterds: a Manipulation of Metacinema (London: Continuum, 2013), pp. 226–227 Google Scholar. Thanks to Steven de Wijze for emphasising the theme of revenge in Tarantino’s revenge films.
87 Compare Ornella’s reading (‘Disruptive violence as a means to create space for reflection’, pp. 322–3), which also notes Rachtman’s courage and the ambivalence viewers are likely to feel as their complicity in murderous voyeurism is highlighted.
88 On the other hand, Shosanna Dreyfus is a good deal less ambiguous and more sympathetic. In fact, her conspiracy to kill Hitler and the German leadership renders attempts to do so by the Basterds unnecessary.
89 By contrast, Ayer seems to redeem something of Raine in the more sophisticated (polyglot) tank commander of Fury. Raine’s behaviour towards German soldiers is recalled by our first sight of Wardaddy ambushing a German officer and killing him with the knife he keeps in his boot.
90 The scene also recalls the beach scenes in Ryan.
91 Note that this doesn’t necessarily affect the viewer’s attitude towards Shosanna Dreyfus’s plan to avenge her murdered family and defeat the Nazis, which is entirely independent of the Basterds’ story.
92 Controversy over Seth Rogan’s Tweet about American Sniper’s resemblance to Nation’s Pride suggests Roth’s movie raises painful questions for those seduced by the morally one-sided cinema discussed in the first part of this section. See Christopher Rosen, ‘Seth Rogan clarifies “American Sniper” Tweet’, Huffington Post (19 January 2015), available at: {http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/01/19/seth-rogen-american-sniper_n_6503586.html} accessed April 2016. Thanks to an anonymous referee for drawing my attention Rogan’s comment.
93 Young, Desmond, Rommel: the Desert Fox (London: Collins, 1950)Google Scholar; Walzer cites a 1958 edition of the book (in Just and Unjust Wars, p. 339, n. 4).
94 Walzer, Just and Unjust Wars, p. xvii.
95 Rosen, ‘Seth Rogan clarifies “American Sniper” Tweet’. On apologetics for US assertiveness post-9/11 in cinema, see Dunn, David Hastings, ‘ The Incredibles: an ordinary day tale of a Superpower in a Post-9/11 Worlds’, Millennium, 34:2 (2006), pp. 559–562 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
96 Gates, ‘“Fighting the Good Fight”, p. 298.
97 Interviewed by Richard Schickel, available at: {https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zP5BhK_xMlA} accessed 5 July 2016 (from Pickup on South St., Dir. Samuel Fuller [DVD], [US: Criterion Collection, 1990]).
98 McMahan, Killing in War, pp. 3, 6–7.
99 Hodgkins, ‘In the wake of Desert Storm’, p. 78.
100 ICRC, The People on War Report, pp. xi, 19.
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