WELCOME TO SARAJEVO
Directed by: Michael Winterbottom
Written by: Frank Cottrell Boyce
Internet
Movie
Database Entry for full details
GRADE: A- (3.3/4)
1997.
Welcome to Sarajevo
opens with a happy family blithely preparing for a wedding as a cheery
pop song plays on the soundtrack. While I picked up my phone and
began dialing my travel agent to book a trip to Bosnia, the family hit
the streets, where the mother promptly received a midriff full of
lead. I put down the phone.
A few scenes later, some reporters at a hotel bar are making a toast
when a bomb explodes and rattles the walls. No one is injured,
but by now I had taken the phone off the hook and hid it in the
closet. Winterbottom ensures that the film is relentlessly grim
and depressing, though he's careful to eschew the melodramatic.
Nearly every peaceful scene of dialogue is interrupted or immediately followed by
some act of violence, and every time the characters are static, which
is rare, the camera moves wildly around them. After all, in war
there is never a moment of peace. It never stops.
Michael, played by Stephen Dillane in an extraordinary performance, is
an English war-correspondent for ITN, stationed in Sarajevo during the
civil war of the early 1990’s. After covering a forgotten
front-line orphanage every day for a week, and having his stories
bumped from the lead because the Duke & Duchess of York are having
marital troubles, he takes it upon himself to try to help the kids.
Any movie about saving orphaned infants from a war-ravaged country is inherently manipulative, but Winterbottom and Boyce
aren’t exactly aiming for subtlety. The
“Sarajevo” of the film is convincingly rendered as a
nightmarish hellscape, a city where potentially deadly sniper-fire is
as ubiquitous as broken faces and dilapidated buildings. Despite
the film’s blatant artificiality, it possesses a visceral
verisimilitude, thanks at least in part to the ceaseless violence,
juxtaposed video footage, and affecting supporting performances by
native Yugoslavians.
A pop music soundtrack serves as an ironic counterpoint to the
on-screen violence, as well as point-out the relative and nearly
insulting complacency of the West. Unlike many similar films,
more than a fair share of the proceedings pays attention to the plight
of the oppressed, not merely using it as a backdrop for one white
Westerner’s personal growth. While specifically about
Sarajevo, the filmmakers have also fashioned a broad anti-war movie
that should stir connections in the contemporary viewer’s mind to
other modern human rights crises, from Rwanda and Darfur to even
present-day Baghdad. Ostensibly, however, it is an accessible
film more about people than politics; it’s another movie about a time when we did nothing and someone else did something.
--
Henry Stewart
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