
April 14, 2005
Voices in Wartime
Not Rated
The rapping GIs in Gunner Palace are just the
latest in a long line of battlefield poets that spans borders and
centuries. They aren't mentioned in this earnest and often moving
documentary, which explores the intersection of war and verse, but their
bitter resignation echoes through the stunningly unsentimental Great War
stanzas of British officers Wilfrid Owen and Siegfried Sassoon. The
doc's timing -- and a section on Sam Hamill igniting a Poets Against the
War movement as his RSVP to Laura Bush's invitation to a writer
symposium -- gives it an anti-Iraq War slant, but the P.O.V. is more
broadly antiwar. Veteran director Rick King lacks the inspiration to
make a truly poetic work, but the familiar blend of archival war footage
and talking heads allows for several haunting passages. When David
Connolly, a Vietnam vet with a terse South Boston brogue, reads his
brilliant, brutal verse, we're reminded that poetry can be as eloquent a
critique of war as the most graphic newsreels, and as visceral an
account of combat as memoirs or journalism. -- Michael Fox
|