Showing posts with label Memorial Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Memorial Day. Show all posts

Monday, May 30, 2022

On Memorial Day, A Cinematic Reminder That Civilians Die and Survive In Wartime

It's the last Monday of May, the day where we think back to the soldiers who died and survived the various wars we've sent them to fight.

It's a time to visit the cemeteries, plant flags at the statues and plaques honoring the fallen, and break out the binge watching of Band of Brothers and any World War II movies we got for check out from the library shelves (or in these modern days, streaming off a service). 

But as a real war rages on in Ukraine - and as a decades-long war in Syria continues its bloody stalemate - we need to remember that it's not just soldiers who are caught on the battlefields.

Far too many wars over the centuries were fought near cities, towns, settlements, places where the common folk were struggling to survive on their own without raiding parties or sieges laying waste to their communities. As the wars grew bigger, as the mechanized armor developed and grew, as the air became a war zone all its own bringing bombs dropped from above, the range of destruction by war spread. By the first World War, entire nations could get enveloped, occupied, devastated, flattened into poppy fields. By the second, the entire continent of Europe was on fire, with few safe havens to flee.

Every place - from the Home Front of London, to the occupied streets of Paris, to the bombed-out neighborhoods of Warsaw, Stalingrad, Leningrad, so many other cities - knew the horror of war.

This fact got my notice a few years ago when - during a channel surf looking for something to watch during summer break - I came across a little-heralded Italian movie titled The Four Days of Naples. As a history buff - especially for WWII - I kept watching it, as I had started up at the moment when the story really kicked off.

For those who don't remember what happened to Italy in the Second World War, the nation had fallen to Fascist control - the originator, in fact - by the mid-1920s in response to their failings in the previous war, and their leader Mussolini had attempted to forge the nation into a military regime. Thing was, they weren't the Romans of old, and most of their military plans - conquering much of the Mediterranean from Greece to Africa - were flawed and wasteful. When Nazi Germany came along as a military ally, Italy signed up to form an Axis Powers with them... and quickly turned into the junior partners as the Nazis were more thorough - and nasty - when it came to war.

By the time Mussolini and his generals flubbed their 1940 invasion of Greece - which forced the Germans to finish the job for them, and affected their ability to invade Soviet Russia - the Italian population were pretty much done with the Fascists leading them.  By 1943, with the Allied forces of Free France, Great Britain, and America knocking at the door from Sicily, the Italians were ready to surrender and be done with all the scarcity, starvation, disease, and the bombing raids decimating their cities.

This is where Four Days of Naples opens, early September 1943, with the citizenry hearing word that the Fascist government had collapsed. With that, the streets erupt with Neapolitans - the term for "Citizen of Naples", no not the ice cream that's NEOpolitan - celebrating, thinking that for them the war is over.

Unfortunately, their city and indeed much of Italy itself has a lot of German troops based there... and the Germans were not about to surrender to the Allies. Nor were they going to give up such prime real estate like the rough Italian terrain...

(The YouTube link below is to the entire movie, it may have fallen into public domain but please respect any copyright laws if needed)

The film is based on the real-life events of that September 1943, focusing heavily on four days - September 27 through September 30 (with October 1st being the day the Allies arrived). The director Nanni Loy employed what's known as the Italian Neorealist style: Where the storytelling focuses on the poor or working classes, intermingling various story threads for each characters weaving a larger story towards the conclusion. It also relies on filming in location (no sets or stages), and working with non-professional actors (although one or two actors would play some of the more emotionally demanding roles).

What you get is a kind of semi-documentary feel to the film, especially with Four Days where the incidents unfold spontaneous in the way the real-life events did. And the events we're watching were astounding.

What the Germans did to Naples after the Italian Fascists fell was to turn it into occupied territory, ending whatever hopes the locals had that their war was over. The army began taking civilians hostage in order to force the rest to comply to their orders. The Germans also began conscripting the men to serve either as forced labor at their "work camps," or turn them into front-line cannon fodder for their planned defensive effort to keep the Allies from reaching Central Europe through the south.

The brutality of the German round-ups became too much for Neapolitans, and by September 27 the Germans were accosted by civilians, mostly women who braved the machine guns to rescue their husbands and sons. With that, the city was in open revolt.

In Loy's film, the chaos of the moment carries every scene forward, from the brutality of the Nazis towards the defiance of the Italians. Entire scenes are breathtaking as we witness them: The most brilliant sequence when an entire neighborhood overlooking an alleyway full of Germans erupts into a rainfall of every possible piece of furniture that could get thrown from the windows.

We're carried along by the drama of the characters themselves. We're introduced to a Hollywood-handsome Italian sailor, with the early scenes - flirting with a melancholic young prostitute, riding a bike through the city as celebrations begin in earnest - hinting he would be the main POV character of the entire movie. (Spoilers: He's the unnamed sailor executed by the Germans at the beginning of the occupation to send the people of Naples a warning) We come across mothers greeting their sons who had gone into hiding to avoid army conscription, only to see those young men seized by Germans, driving those mothers to rebel. There's a couple - the man loves the woman, but she married a wealthier man long before - playing out a melodrama that happened a lot apparently during the Big War. There's a school of orphans, led by a teenage resister who rebukes their schoolmaster when the city rises up against the occupiers. There's a little boy lost in the chaos of the uprising, eagerly chasing from one fight to the next to watch the battles, innocently unaware of the dangers of war...

When the movie came out in 1962, the Second World War was still fresh in the memory for those who lived it (the film itself relies on the damaged buildings that had remained standing for almost 20 years as background). Four Days was a moderate success, and had even been nominated for several awards (for Best Foreign Film and for a Best Screenplay award with the Oscars). And then, well, it's almost hard to find. There doesn't seem to have ever been a DVD release honoring it. I'd rarely seen it on the cable networks ever since I saw it years ago. Someone on Twitter thankfully pointed out the YouTube link to me.

It's an important film. Unlike most war movies that focus on the battles, or the generals, or the soldiers, this was a film that focuses on the civilians who get caught in the crossfire, and the many moral - sometimes noble - decisions they have to make to survive.

I hope you all watch this. It's a breathtaking perspective of what war is for those who don't want to fight in one. 

Sunday, May 24, 2020

Quick Memorial Day 2020 Rage Post

So I know this is Memorial Day weekend, traditionally the start of THE SUMMER SEASON, but this is 2020 and we're three months into an official COVID-19 Pandemic and one of the key things we need to be doing is SOCIAL DISTANCING and avoiding crowded places, which is why there's no Summer Blockbuster Movie Summer to be pining over - I am missing my Wonder Woman sequel, damn you trump - and why whatever meager travel plans I had for my birthday this month are on hold and why for the LOVE OF GOD we need to be avoiding the beaches and water holes and yet here's a bunch of things on Twitter and the news outlets about how FAR TOO MANY of our fellow Americans are breaching the safety guidelines, JESUS CHRIST, such as reports coming out about the turnout at the Lake of the Ozarks in Missouri:

...They appear to show people gathering at Redhead Lakeside Grill and Yacht Club in Osage Beach at Lake of the Ozarks. We've blurred the faces in the photos, until we learn more about the event, and why so many people were allowed inside.
The pictures show people close together, with no masks...
5 On Your Side reached out to the Camden County Sheriff's Department who said, the state does have social distancing guidelines, but "It doesn't seem people are following it very well here."
The Sheriff's Department has not been called to any incidents so far, and said they do not have any penalty to enforce because there are no orders in place to require social distancing...

For all the morans running around screaming "TYRANNY" about their "FREEDOM" to NOT wear masks in public and all, there's actually few laws in place to enforce these things. It's meant to be voluntary, in that PEOPLE ARE SUPPOSED TO RESPECT THE REALITY THAT SOCIAL CONTACT CAN SPREAD THE VIRUS, SO JUST FCKING DON'T DO IT. /headdesk

And of course Florida - even though we've been better than most in being that voluntary and self-aware about social distancing - even the Sunshine State had to go crazy for Memorial Day weekend because guess what happened out at Daytona Beach already:

...Police believe the crowd that shutdown traffic in the city was part of an unofficial event shared on social media.
“Traffic is completely shut down with probably 200 people in the middle of the road,” a voice from the helicopter said over radio. “Trying to figure out what’s going on. It’s people, looks like they’re climbing on top of a car,” the pilot can be heard saying over the radio...

Subsequent Twitter posts showed mobs of shoulder-to-shoulder crowds.

And this can't be the only place. Think of how many states have famous gathering spots, beaches and parks that thousands go to for the big summertime events... I'm in Florida, from Jacksonville to Daytona to Cocoa to Melbourne to Palm Beach to Pompano Beach to South Beach to the Keys to Sanibel to Sarasota to ALL of Pinellas County's gulf side to Weeki Wachee to Panama Beach to Pensacola, goddamn we are Beach Party Central and I dread how many residents went crazy this weekend just out of decades of social conditioning to party on a three-day weekend.

What the GODDAMN HELL, America.

You're getting told by a number of Republican politicians that "all is well" and you lot go on a Darwin-Award-worthy jaunt that will get half of you showing COVID fevers within the next 5-14 days.

This is the second wave we've been warned about. And we were nowhere near finishing the first wave of the pandemic.

We are so royally fucked.

Monday, May 27, 2019

Every Violent Man trump Will Set Free

I dread this year's Memorial Day - usually meant as a moment for Americans to honor war veterans (albeit slightly different from Veterans Day) - because of the way the Shitgibbon-in-Chief is going to desecrate the purpose of today.

For some background, let's refer to Aaron Rupar's article at Vox.com:

Taking cues from Fox News, President Donald Trump is reportedly considering commemorating Memorial Day by pardoning several American troops accused of war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan...
On Monday, the Daily Beast reported that Trump’s interest in the pardons is in part a result of “a months-long lobbying campaign” by Iraq War veteran Pete Hegseth, a Fox & Friends weekend co-host who doubles as an informal adviser to the president.
Hegseth reacted to the Daily Beast’s report by tweeting it with hashtags calling for pardons for Chief Petty Officer Edward Gallagher, a Navy SEAL leader who is awaiting court-martial on charges he shot unarmed civilians and stabbed a defenseless teenager while deployed to help Iraqi forces fight ISIS in 2017; Mathew Golsteyn, a Silver Star recipient (the honor was later stripped) who admitted to killing a Taliban bombmaker in Afghanistan in February 2010 and is scheduled to be tried on charges of premeditated murder; and Clint Lorance, who is serving a 19-year sentence following his conviction on murder charges stemming from the shooting of three Afghan men in July 2012...
But it is not “the left” that has accused the troops in question of war crimes — it is the military justice system. While Trump seems to view the pardons as a gift to the military, it’s actually the military that has decided to prosecute Gallagher and Golsteyn. Pardons, in short, would interfere in prosecution instigated by the military, which is an extremely unusual thing for the president to do.
“Absent evidence of innocence or injustice the wholesale pardon of US servicemembers accused of war crimes signals our troops and allies that we don’t take the Law of Armed Conflict seriously,” Gen. Martin Dempsey, who served as President Barack Obama’s senior military adviser, tweeted on Wednesday. “Bad message. Bad precedent. Abdication of moral responsibility. Risk to us.”

These violent men - who'd have been charged with serial murder and other acts of violence if they did any of this as civilians - are going to get pardoned by a well-documented draft dodger (Google "President Bone Spurs") who seems to think that regular soldiers - our best soldiers - go around like pumped-up Rambos shooting everything in sight.

trump is openly interfering with ongoing military trials - Gallagher hasn't been convicted yet making his possible pardon an unjustifiable preemptive move - all to score political points with a voting base who eagerly cheer on any act of violence against anyone not of their tribe (and Iraqi and Afghani civilians fit that definition).

And if trump thinks this will mollify or encourage greater acts of violence from our troops, he's only stirring more intraservice dread and disunity. If you read the reports on Gallagher, his fellow Navy SEALs were horrified by his blood-thirst and kept reporting him up a chain of command that didn't want to hear any of it. That his own unit turned him in and are willing to testify shows how twisted Gallagher got... and now trump's planned pardon will mock their honor in doing so. As John Cole - a battlefield Iraqi War veteran - notes at Balloon-Juice

...pardoning war criminals doesn’t honor our troops regardless what fucking day of the year it is done. It’s a spit in the face of every man and woman who served honorably in the military. It’s saying “hey- you’re all murderers anyway.” It’s fucking disgusting.

There is a genuine threat to discipline here: Commanding officers will find it harder to keep the more violent soldiers on a leash if those men believe trump will issue them a "Get Out of Jail Free" card. The troops who don't agree with that violence will realize their military legal system is useless and take matters into their own hands. We'd be bringing back the worst traits and behaviors of Vietnam...

Despite what trump and his Fox Not-News buddies think, our military takes the status of "Noncombatant" civilians seriously nowadays. They want to avoid random acts of bloodshed against innocents, and not because we've been there before with atrocities like My Lai

It's because of the very nature of the ongoing War on Terror we're in right now. The enemy we're fighting isn't troops on a battlefield, it's mad bombers and snipers hiding among the civilians using them as human shields and daring us to kill 'em all in order to make their war zone a quagmire to trap us until we're broken. Every time our side commits an atrocity the terrorists win. It makes it harder for the United States to justify its actions overseas, alienating our allies on the ground and converting more people to side with a devil they know (the terrorists).

But trump doesn't care about any of that. he's all about appeasing his base and rewarding those he thinks will serve himself.

An honest Commander-in-Chief would never go this low.

And GODS HELP US how these pardoned killers will get feted and honored by the Far Right when those pardons clear.

We are so very royally violently fucked.