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Defiance
doesn't go beyond the usual tales of valor and
virtue, managing to make an amazing true story
feel like yet another dry history lesson.
Daniel Craig and Liev Schreiber, to their credit,
do their best in the lead roles to make Defiance
feel like something special. A pair of brothers
easily defined as the responsible one (Craig's
Tuvia) and the wild one (Schreiber's Zus), they
return to their family homestead in Belorussia
to find their parents murdered by Nazis, and flee
with their younger brothers Asael (Jamie Bell)
and Aron (George McKay) to the woods they navigated
as children. After striking back against the Nazi
officer responsible for killing their parents,
Tuvia and Zus vow to live nobly, to make survival
their way of fighting back.
Before
long they've assembled a colony of refugees in
the woods, as more and more Jews get word of the
haven that Bielski brothers have established.
Tuvia and Zus struggle with a deeply held rivalry,
but Zus acts as the muscle of the group--raiding
local farms for food, handling occasional scuffles
with Nazis-- while Tuvia establishes law and order.
Everyone pitches in building shelters, cooking
food and hunting, while Zus establishes an alliance
with the Russian Army that provides them even
more physical protection.
Soon
the rift between the brothers drives Zus to fight
with the Reds while at the camp Asael falls in
love with and marries Chaya (Mia Wasikowska) and
Tuvia starts making eyes at a gorgeous, way-too-young-for
him forest dweller named Lilka (Alexa Davalos).
For a while life just kind of goes on--Tuvia gets
sick, someone gets pregnant, a jerk gets shot,
but finally the story moves onward when the Nazis
discover the camp, and Zus and Tuvia must reunite
to save the community that has come to rely on
them.
The
whole thing ends in a familiar-looking battle
that's meant to be climactic, but it takes place
in 1942, with three solid years of the Holocaust
still left to survive. We're told in end titles
what becomes of everyone, including how the Bielskis
moved to New York, opened a business like anyone
else, and never really talked about their experiences.
Talk about leaving out the good part! It's frustrating
to think of how much more dynamic the story could
have been with a few narrative tricks, like a
frame story or flashbacks to keep the fascinating
true-life details intact.
By
narrowing the focus, Zwick is left with an exceedingly
familiar story of survival, the community-building
aspects of old Westerns combined with the guns-and-grit
morality of every other World War II movie ever
made. The challenge of telling this story is to
help the audience relate to these people, put
in circumstances most of us find unimaginable.
Though it's not a typical Holocaust film, Defiance
sits at a remove in the same way, letting us marvel
at these people but never accessing them as real
humans.
Schreiber
and Craig are committed in the lead roles, and
have a nice chemistry, and Bell keeps growing
up before our eyes, showing the makings of a real
leading man here. The earthy cinematography from
Eduardo Serra and James Newton Howard's generically
bombastic score put a classy sheen over the whole
thing, and the action scenes are well-staged but
a little pedestrian. Again, for some it will be
enough just to hear the story, and the basic facts
of Defiance are enough to propel it for a while.
But the spark, imagination and verve that make
great movies worth watching are missing here,
and this remarkable story is poorly served as
a result.
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