Film Review: ‘Private Peaceful,’ Brothers in Arms

When two movie brothers go off to war, it is a lead-pipe cinch that one of them is not coming back. The questions will be which one and under what circumstances. The answers will be revealed in a series of flashbacks throughout Pat O'Connor’s World War I drama, “Private Peaceful.”
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When two movie brothers go off to war, it is a lead-pipe cinch that one of them is not coming back. The questions will be which one and under what circumstances. The answers will be revealed in a series of flashbacks throughout Pat O'Connor’s World War I drama, “Private Peaceful.”

Adapted from the novel by “War Horse” author Michael Morpurgo, “Private” will incorporate the themes of “Paths of Glory” and “Saving Private Ryan” within trenches of Flanders, but Simon Reade’s screenplay scrupulously takes its time establishing the “Peaceful” family dynamics before reaching that point.

Charlie Peaceful is the older, brasher brother, who always looked out for the shyer, more sensitive Thomas “Tommo” Peaceful. Poor Tommo will become increasingly withdrawn, first blaming himself for the death of their gamekeeper father and then watching Charlie marry Molly Monks, the childhood friend they both love, after getting her in a family way.

Article Quote: 'Private Peaceful': Brothers in Arms

Initially, Tommo Peaceful volunteers as a way of escaping his broken heart, but he quickly learns the bitter realities of trench fighting and chemical warfare. Soon his brother enlists, despite his parental obligations, in order to keep Tommo alive. Naturally, Charlie Peaceful clashes badly with the gung-ho Sgt. Hanley, ultimately leading to the court martial seen in deliberately cagey snippets throughout the film.

The notion that the officers and war boosters were blithely anticipating previous wars is hardly a new insight, but “Private” adds a clumsy element of class warfare in the person of the corpulent Colonel, who owns the estate employing the Peacefuls’ father and subsequently exploiting the Peaceful mother and brothers.

“Guns and horses, that’s how we beat the Boers,” he blusters. As great as the late Richard Griffiths was (we prefer to remember him in “Withnail & I” rather than “Harry Potter”), his turn as the Colonel is total caricature.

Jack O'Connell as Charlie Peaceful, the older boy, in "Private Peaceful." (Fluidity Films)
Jack O'Connell as Charlie Peaceful, the older boy, in "Private Peaceful." Fluidity Films
Joe Bendel
Joe Bendel
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Joe Bendel writes about independent film and lives in New York City. To read his most recent articles, visit JBSpins.blogspot.com
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