"Hart’s War" tells the story of LT.
Tommy Hart (Colin Farrell), an officer
at the rear headquarters in Europe who
is safely behind the lines thanks to
his Senator father. Hart was in his
second year of law school at Yale when
he entered the war and is content at
serving his country in HQ. While
driving to a field office, Hart is
taken prisoner and finds himself in a
Stalag run by the brutal Major Wilhelm
Visser (Marcel Iures) and the ranking
prisoner Colonel William McNamara
(Bruce Willis), who is a fourth
generation West Point graduate. Hart
is ordered to live apart from the
officers in enlisted men’s barracks
ostensibly due to a lack of space.
Hart later learns that McNamara does
not trust him as his debriefing only
lasted three days by the Nazis and he
never moved past an entry level
interrogator. Undaunted, Hart goes
about adjusting to life in the camp
and even gets the attention of the
camps trade merchant Bedford, (Cole
Hauser) who has a knack for finding
items prisoners need for a price be it
winter boots and socks or parts for an
illegal radio. Life in the camp is
soon disrupted by the arrival of two
black airmen who have been shot down.
Mcnamara instructs Hart to watch out
for the men and this causes him to run
afoul of the men he lives with, as
they are very opposed to living with
black officers. When one of the black
pilots is framed and executed,
tensions run high in the camp. The
discovery of a dead white prisoner
further complicates matters when the
remaining black pilot is forced to
stand trial for the crime and Hart is
assigned to protect him.
It is at
this point that the movie becomes
uneven as its pacing and focus become
very uneven. It seems as if director
Gregory Hoblit was unsure if he wanted
a prisoner escape film, a racial drama
in the vein of "A Soldiers Story" or a
courtroom drama such as "A Few Good
Men". The screenplay by Billy Ray and
Terry George does service to the book
by John Katzenbach, but fails to have
the emotional impact that the book
had. Willis is good in a subdued role,
as the audience is never sure of
McNamara’s intentions until the very
end. Farell plays Hart as a wide-eyed
soldier who is removed from his place
of comfort and has to develop the
traits of leadership, loyalty and
honor as he learns that life in the
camp. And on the lines is not the
starched uniforms and lifestyle to
which he had become accustomed. Marcel
Iures is effective in his portrayal as
he is a man of diversity. Capable of
killing without hesitation one minute
and listening to jazz while reading
Mark Twain the next, he is a loyal
soldier who is determined to do his
duty to the end.
The film is a hard one to get a
grasp on, as it was a well-crafted
film with some great cinema
photography. The pacing of the film is
slow as the film builds to its climax
in an methodical manner that is
plausible despite some Hollywood style
trickery such as characters dragging
events out in order for future events
to happen even though their delays
have no valid reasons and would not
likely happen in reality. That being
said, the film did entertain at times
but it left me with an empty feeling,
as I did not gain hope, inspiration or
satisfaction from the characters and
their stories, only acceptance of
their fates much like the huddled
masses imprisoned in the stalag.
3 stars out of 5