|
WSWS : Arts
Review : Film
Reviews
A valuable and compelling antiwar film
By Richard Phillips
7 December 2005
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Gallipoli: The Front Line Experience, written and directed
by Tolga Örnek
The 1915 military assault by British, French, Australian and
New Zealand forces on Gallipoli in Turkey was probably one of
the most tragic and ill-conceived campaigns fought by the Allied
Forces during World War I. Championed by Britains First
Lord of the Admiralty Winston Churchill, the attack, which was
aimed at securing control of the Dardanelles and the Turkish capital
Istanbul, was a devastating defeat for the Allied Forces.
The nine-month campaign resulted in the death of more than
130,000 troops. This included the loss of more than 85,000 Turkish
soldiers, 21,000 British, 10,000 French, 8,700 Australians, 2,700
New Zealanders and 1,370 Indians, and a total of more than 250,000
wounded.
While these events have been the subject of several films,
including Peter Weirs well-known 1981 feature Gallipoli,
starring Mel Gibson and Mark Lee, a recently released two-hour
documentary by Turkish director Tolga Örnek and narrated
by Sam Neill and Jeremy Irons is probably the most intelligent
and deeply affecting of all these works.
Like most contemporary war documentaries, Örneks
movieGallipoli: The Front Line Experienceuses
archival photos and film footage, as well as aerial photography
and dramatisations to provide a detailed account of the military
campaign. But Örneks use of the letters and diaries
of 10 soldiersBritish, Australian, New Zealand and Turkishselected
from scores discovered by his research team gives it an extraordinary
human dimension and immediacy.
Örnek told one interviewer that as soon as he started
reading the correspondence of the Gallipoli soldiers, the event
stopped being about numbers and dates and that the
horrors of war; how it destroyed lives, families and how it did
this with indifference to race, religion, nationality or the motivation
for being there, became clearer to me.
Slowly these sentiments, he said, began to
transform the film. And what started out as a war documentary
based on personal accounts became a strong antiwar project warning
us about the perils of war.
Military assault
The British-led attack on the Dardanelles, the narrow and strategic
sea-lane near Istanbul separating the Aegean and Black Seas, was
aimed at assisting Londons ally Czarist Russia, then in
combat with Turkish forces and the German military.
This grand plan, however, involved no serious estimation of
Turkeys military strength or the determination of its soldiers
and figures such as Gallipoli military commander Mustafa Kemal,
later known as Atatürk, founder and president of the Turkish
republic, to defend their homeland.
British leaders such as Churchill arrogantly believed that
a display of superior naval firepower would induce panic amongst
Turkish soldiers and the Ottoman Empire, then allied with Germany,
would be quickly knocked out of the war, allowing Britain and
France free rein in the Middle East.
As Robin Prior, one of several historians interviewed in the
film, explained, according to this theory the Turkish government
will be so impressed, the Turkish people so overawed by our squadron
of British battleships that they will immediately throw up their
hands and surrender.
The first major attack on the Dardanelles in March 1915 involved
a combined British and French naval bombardment of the defending
Turkish forts. But there was no grand victory. In fact, the operation
was a total failure, with three of the sixteen ships involved
sunk, three seriously damaged by mines and 700 sailors killed.
Churchill insisted, however, that Turkish firepower had been
badly affected by the naval bombardment and ordered a British-led
land assault on Gallipoli. British, French and Indian troops,
together with Australian and New Zealand soldiers (known as Anzacs)
temporarily stationed in Egypt on their way to Europes Western
Front, were mobilised for the attack.
Churchills plan was a disaster. The Turkish military
had more than three weeks to prepare and was ready when Allied
forces landed at beaches along the peninsula in the early hours
of April 25.
They faced a massive artillery barrage and thousands were killed,
with many soldiers unable to leave their landing craft, or drowning
before reaching land. British troops suffered the highest casualties,
including 1,000 killed at one beach in the first 12 hours. Although
the Allied troops were able to press inland in some places, at
no stage were they able to dislodge the Turkish defenders from
the peninsulas commanding heights.
Trench warfare soon began in earnest with frontline positions
in some places only five metres apart. This was the first experience
of serious industrial warfare for Turkish and Anzac soldiers and
the casualty rates were extreme, with more than 10,000 soldiers
killed on each side in the first ten days. Such was the slaughter
that in one area, the size of tennis court, there were more than
600 deada veritable carpet of bodies.
On May 24, a month after the assault had begun, an eight-hour
armistice was called to allow the dead to be buried. Many bodies
were dug into the trench walls, the smell of death a permanent
feature of soldiers horrifying existence. As soon as the
corpses were recovered the fighting resumed.
It is difficult to adequately describe the harvest of death
and suffering, but Gallipoli was without question a hell on earth.
As one letter cited in the film from Turkish soldier Ahmet
Mucip comments: I have no idea when the sun crossed over
to the west today. Darkness fell over the sea and the whole area.
Hundreds of British boys were lying on our land never to open
their eyes again. These boys with clean-shaven faces and endearing
faces were curled up in their bloodstained uniforms. The sight
aroused in us feelings of both revenge and compassion.
British Lieutenant Colonel and doctor Percival Fenwick commented
in one of his letters that life under the constant shadow
of death had become savagely simple. Letters
from rank and file British soldier Guy Nightingale, initially
an enthusiastic supporter of the attack, chart his increasing
hostility to the bloody campaign. As he angrily declares in one
of his letters: Live and let live, and Turkey for the Turks.
A New Zealand soldier, one of many who had begun with some
naive confidence in the assault, writes to his family that he
had become so physically and psychologically exhausted from fighting
that he wished for a bullet.
Perhaps the most moving letter is from a Turkish soldier to
his parents. Knowing that he is likely to die the next day, he
begs them to make sure his wife and children are properly cared
for in his absence. Another heartbreaking letter is from a British
soldier who came across the torn backpack of a dead Australian
soldier. Lying there amongst all the horror and destruction are
two pale-blue baby shoes and a womans silk glovesobviously
the dead young mans most treasured possessions.
As well as those killed by artillery and hand-to-hand combat,
thousands died from infection, enteric fever, dysentery, diarrhea
and various fly-borne diseases. Others were burnt to death in
out-of-control scrub fires and some were drowned in sewage. An
estimated 20,000 Turkish soldiers died from poor food and disease.
When heavy storms hit the area on November 27 and lasted for
three days, scores of soldiers were drowned in their trenches.
A few days later a freezing blizzard hit the area, killing hundreds
more from exposure. According to the Örneks documentary,
16,000 allied soldiers had to be evacuated with frostbite.
Having failed to make any real gains after months of fighting,
including a desperate but failed offensive in August, the British-led
high command finally decided to withdraw from the peninsula in
late 1915.
While British authorities tried to downplay the disaster, British
military commander Ian Hamilton was removed from his position
just before the final evacuation and Churchill, who became known
as the butcher of Gallipoli, was forced to quit his
ministerial position in disgrace.
In Australia, under conditions of widespread hostility to the
war and military conscription, the government and the local ruling
elite attempted to proclaim the criminal waste of human life at
Gallipoli a necessary and noble baptism of fire for
the young Australian nation. Instead of dwelling on the military
defeat, emphasis was placed on the fact that no one was killed
in the evacuation. Stories of undoubted heroism and self-sacrifice
were cynically shaped into legendary proportions and used to bolster
nationalist sentiment.
April 25, the date of the Gallipoli landing, was declared a
public holiday in 1920 and has been used since then by politicians
of all stripes as an occasion to whip up nationalist fervour and,
when required, support for new military adventures.
Gallipoli: The Front Line Experience does not explore
these myths, nor does it attempt to explain the underlying causes
of the war or its imperialist character. But its meticulous and
objective presentation of the destruction of tens of thousands
of young men and poignant commentary from those in Gallipolis
trenches make it a damning antiwar statement.
As 33-year-old Örnek explained to one interviewer: Its
not my goal to shock people but I want to display the conditions
and how horrific it was. I want to take the glory and the polish
out of war because when we glorify battles, when we mythicise,
we really undermine the actual suffering that takes place, the
actual horrors.... [W]ar is not glory, war is not polished; its
mud, disease, death, and fear.
Gallipoli: The Front Line Experience was released in
Turkey early this year and for five weeks was the countrys
highest grossing movie. It is the most successful documentary
in Turkish history. While most Australian critics praised the
film following its Australian release in November, it is only
being screened in a handful of cinemas. It is not expected to
survive the surfeit of mindless comedies and blockbuster movies
soon to hit the local cinemas for the Christmas season.
Örneks film should be seen by all those who want
to understand the real Gallipoli story. It certainly deserves
a much wider audience.
See Also:
"My film is not a national propaganda
tool"
An interview with Tolga Ornëk, director of Gallipoli:
The Front Line Experience
[20 December 2005]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |