DVD: A War | reviews, news & interviews
DVD: A War
DVD: A War
Restrained moral drama from the director of ‘A Hijacking’
The premise driving A War – lead character Claus Pedersen’s war – is the decision he makes as Company Commander while leading an army patrol in Afghanistan: whether or not to say he and his Danish unit are under attack from a specific house in a village.
Up to this pivotal moment, Pedersen (Pilou Asbæk) and his fellow soldiers are seen in their camp and going out on patrol. Routine. The day-to-day life of his wife and children, at home in Copenhagen, is contrasted with the posting. Although apart, each lives in a pressure cooker: his due to the conflict; hers as a result of dealing with their two children in an atmosphere of constant uncertainty. Phone calls do not bring comfort.
After this pivotal moment, Pedersen is back in Denmark and on trial for potentially having no basis for bringing planes in to destroy the house. There seems to be no evidence to support his choice. He may even have been a reckless commander: should he have been on patrol at all? His trial, where he is represented by the pragmatic Martin Olsen (a reliably sharp Søren Malling), and the return to a strained home life take up just over the final third of the film.
The Oscar-nominated A War (Krigen) is directed by Tobias Lindholm, whose absolutely gripping 2012 drama A Hijacking also starred Asbæk and Malling. This, though, is not a war film and does not hit as hard. About the day-to-day experience, its impact and as a drama of morals, it is restrained. Maybe too much so. Much of the film is flat and dramatic tension levels are even throughout – like a pot on low boil. Momentum is lacking.
Despite this Asbæk and Malling are compelling, but Tuva Novotny as Pedersen’s wife Maria borders on drab. It feels like an extended TV drama: Lindholm wrote for Borgen and his finessed approach here may have more comfortably suited the smaller screen or even the stage. There are no extras on the home cinema release. A pity, as an understanding of Lindholm’s approach may have enhanced appreciation of A War.
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