7/10
War is never black or white; it has many shades of "Gray".
12 January 2003
In this evocative war film, we don't get the usual battle scenes or

soldiers etc ( such as Saving Private Ryan or Full Metal Jacket ).

We do not see the brutality and realism of death camps. We get a

refreshing perspective, showing how war affects everyday people,

such as Charlotte and the French villagers, and the two little boys ,

who we do not realise are Jewish straight away; just ordinary kids. This film works on a number of levels; how war forces people to

make unbearable decisions, such as Julien's decision to save the

children rather than his father. How war causes inherent distrust,

betrayal, and loyalty; bringing out both the worst and best in

everyday people. It comments on the fleeting circumstances of

love, and its fragility; Charlotte realises that because of her

experiences she cannot possibly love the English pilot; which is

what all of her motivation and desire originally was; war changes

people forever. Armstrong deliberately and cleverly gives Blanchett

the name "Gray"; in the process of the story she increasingly

becomes confused, guilt-ridden, distrustful; realising that war is

not the good guy against the bad guy ( an easy attitude for the pilot

who can just shoot down an enemy plane if it has German

markings, or bomb targets that are German...he was aloof and

"cold" because of this role, and Charlotte sees it in their final

meeting, after she had been immersed in the conflict rather than

flying above it ). War has so many shades of grey ( gray ), very

perceptively portrayed by the director; naturally, a woman. This will

be an eternal issue; carried on at this very moment by the

inevitable war with Iraq; politicians and those who brainwash the

military, if they haven't been already, can only see in black or white,

and will always face the consequences of this.
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