This is something of a spin-off from this thread, which started off on the depiction of the Gallipoli campaign in a recent film. I was particularly interested by how the film was the OP's (and, I suspect, many people's) first encounter with the historical subject matter. In this case, it was a spring to find out more, but it brought home how much of what we 'know' about the past is actually taught to us, at least at first, by what we see on screen.
This might not be a good thing. A quick Google search brought me to this article in the Telegraph (I know, and I apologise) titled 'Russell Crowe in The Water Diviner: Rewriting History'. I must admit that most of it is rubbish, revolving around indignation that Russell Crowe might think that our picture of Gallipoli is one-sided, treating the Australians as heroes and remembering their sacrifices while forgetting that the Turkish soldiers there were in exactly the same position. However, one line from itis worth bringing out:
The problem is that this 'actual history' is rarely, in films, entirely accurate. Another article lists the factual inaccuracies, most of which are fairly minor - a figure for the total casualties of a battle mistakenly given as the number of Australian dead, the presence of beards on British soldiers, a day's error in the date of an engagement. Beyond the 'simple facts', though, there are bigger problems. Again, I'll quote:
A more often-raised criticism of the film is that it does not mention anything of the Armenian Genocide, despite being released on the 100th anniversary of the Turkish government's order to commit it. You might fairly say that the plot doesn't demand it, but somebody wrote that plot. We usually rightly complain when writers create stories making heroes of Nazi soldiers without mentioning the Holocaust, or of Confederates without mentioning slavery. We've seen right here on CFC that many people have no context for this film, and can hardly expect most of them to go and look up the details of Ottoman history after seeing it.
Nor is The Water Diviner the only film that could be mentioned here. 300 is held up fairly regularly on the opposite charge, that it presents a view of history that sits neatly with Greek national mythology (and some slightly nastier racial mythologising to boot), but has little in common with how the Battle of Thermopylae or Classical Greece actually looked. Even more recently, The Imitation Game was criticised for suggesting, falsely, that Alan Turing covered for a Soviet spy. Reaching back only a little, we can find Breaker Morant, a film which has inspired people (against the director's intent, it must be said) to make heroes out of Australian officers who murdered several PoWs and an unarmed civilian churchman during the Boer War.
This brings up several points to discuss:
This might not be a good thing. A quick Google search brought me to this article in the Telegraph (I know, and I apologise) titled 'Russell Crowe in The Water Diviner: Rewriting History'. I must admit that most of it is rubbish, revolving around indignation that Russell Crowe might think that our picture of Gallipoli is one-sided, treating the Australians as heroes and remembering their sacrifices while forgetting that the Turkish soldiers there were in exactly the same position. However, one line from itis worth bringing out:
Because Crowe is a Great Actor, his words are taken as being authoritative. His film will be watched, and treated, as if it were actual history.
The problem is that this 'actual history' is rarely, in films, entirely accurate. Another article lists the factual inaccuracies, most of which are fairly minor - a figure for the total casualties of a battle mistakenly given as the number of Australian dead, the presence of beards on British soldiers, a day's error in the date of an engagement. Beyond the 'simple facts', though, there are bigger problems. Again, I'll quote:
The Water Diviner, filmed partly in Turkey and produced with the co-operation of the Turkish government, paints the Greeks as barbaric invaders. That, of course, plays to Turkish nationalist mythology. But it is certainly true that the Greeks invaded Anatolia in the wake of the Great War and that atrocities were committed (on both sides, though the film portrays them as being one-sided). The Greek troops are dressed and act as murderous banditti, not as Evzones, who wore a khaki military uniform and who operated as formed military units. Some Greek troops did operate as banditti, as depicted in the film, but the film-makers have basically reflected a Turkish view of the Greek invasion.
A more often-raised criticism of the film is that it does not mention anything of the Armenian Genocide, despite being released on the 100th anniversary of the Turkish government's order to commit it. You might fairly say that the plot doesn't demand it, but somebody wrote that plot. We usually rightly complain when writers create stories making heroes of Nazi soldiers without mentioning the Holocaust, or of Confederates without mentioning slavery. We've seen right here on CFC that many people have no context for this film, and can hardly expect most of them to go and look up the details of Ottoman history after seeing it.
Nor is The Water Diviner the only film that could be mentioned here. 300 is held up fairly regularly on the opposite charge, that it presents a view of history that sits neatly with Greek national mythology (and some slightly nastier racial mythologising to boot), but has little in common with how the Battle of Thermopylae or Classical Greece actually looked. Even more recently, The Imitation Game was criticised for suggesting, falsely, that Alan Turing covered for a Soviet spy. Reaching back only a little, we can find Breaker Morant, a film which has inspired people (against the director's intent, it must be said) to make heroes out of Australian officers who murdered several PoWs and an unarmed civilian churchman during the Boer War.
This brings up several points to discuss:
- Do film-makers have a duty to consider how their work affects the popular understanding of history, and should they be held accountable for how it does?
- Is there a conflict between good cinema and good history?
- Can Hollywood ever be expected to get its history right? If not, should it stop trying to make 'historical' films?