Thursday, 29 March 2018

You cannot reason with a tiger when your head is in its mouth!

The Darkest Hour (2017)

Neville Chamberlain's faux pas with appeasement policy forced him to resign after Hitler ran over Belgium and France. Churchill was chosen as the replacement Prime Minister when Viscount Halifax declined the offer as he felt that he was not ready. Churchill was the only Conservative member who garnered the support of the Opposition and had been warning the House on the dangers of Hitler's military might even before Chamberlain's Norway debacle.

The ghost of Gallipoli did not augur well for his military strategies as many were wary of his seemingly ambitious plans. King George VI, who later developed a cordial relationship with Churchill, had his reservations since his support of King Edward's liaison to Wallis Simpson and subsequent abdication of the throne.

On the home ground, Churchill had a supportive hand in his wife, Clementine, but had to fight his inner demons, the black dog, depression. The indecisiveness on whether to broker peace with Hitler through Mussolini or to fight on proved too overwhelming for this war-time Prime Minister.

He had to decide to rescue the stranded British soldiers and to face eminent German attack on British soil. The movie deals with how Churchill, with his political wrangling and oratory skills, convinced the country to 'fight on the beaches' till 'the loser chokes on his own blood'.

It is interesting to note that despite being sidelined after his snafu about the Germans, Chamberlain remained in the Cabinet as a vital playmaker of the Conservative Party. At the same time, he was slowly dying of cancer.

Historians scoff at the supposed fictionalised accounts of the scenes depicted in this film. After the appointment of Churchill to the post, Halifax and Chamberlain are seen considering to get a vote of no confidence to oust him. When Churchill was undecided on the possibility of initiating peace talks with the enemy, he is seen here to make an unprecedented trip on the Underground to get the popular viewpoint from the crowd.

Overall, this flick is an intense drama with some powerful lines and a stellar performance by the almost unrecognisable Gary Oldman.
Memorable lines

“We have a drunkard at the wheel,” “I wouldn’t let him borrow my bicycle,”

“You cannot reason with a tiger when your head is in its mouth!”

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