All Quiet on the Western Front | Little White Lies

All Qui­et on the West­ern Front

13 Oct 2022 / Released: 14 Oct 2022

Stern-faced soldier in military uniform and steel helmet, surrounded by other soldiers with similar expressions.
Stern-faced soldier in military uniform and steel helmet, surrounded by other soldiers with similar expressions.
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Anticipation.

Erich Maria Remarque’s famous war novel gets a German-language makeover.

3

Enjoyment.

The movie equivalent of a military step: procedural and faceless, but interesting to observe.

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In Retrospect.

The latest addition to Netflix’s war film landfill.

Edward Berger’s trench-foot-and-all retelling of this clas­sic war sto­ry lacks orig­i­nal­i­ty in its brutality.

Here we go again. All Qui­et on the West­ern Front 22 is the first Ger­man-lan­guage adap­ta­tion of Erich Maria Remarque’s clas­sic war nov­el, not a remake of the 1930 Hol­ly­wood film of the same name. Although the film­mak­ers would have you believe this is an entire­ly fresh update, increas­ing­ly war films of this ilk are a dime a dozen on Netflix.

We find Paul (Felix Kam­mer­er) cycling down the sparse cob­bled streets of wartime Europe on his way to join the war effort. As a baby-faced 17-year-old he must lie about his age in order to enlist with his mates. When Paul is hand­ed his uni­form, he naive­ly thinks it’s some­one else’s – it has some­one else’s name on it, after all. He swift­ly becomes a shell of his for­mer self as he traipses towards the West­ern Front, his friends by this point either estranged or dead, his youth­ful joie de vivre replaced by zomb­i­fied attrition.

The film is pep­pered with ten­der, albeit heavy-hand­ed, metaphors for the loss of inno­cence expe­ri­enced by young men like Paul: fox cubs snug­gling up to their moth­er; a small bee­tle being encased in a match­box. But any respite from the tub-thump­ing this is war’ vio­lence is short-lived. The film’s Net­flix-ready sheen also ren­ders much of the action cold­ly anony­mous. For the most part, this is war-by-numbers.

Mean­while, Matthias Erzberg­er (Daniel Brühl) and Gen­er­al Friedrich (Dev­id Striesow) clash behind the scenes over how the war should be fought: the for­mer a jad­ed peace­mak­er; the lat­ter a wannabe sol­dier who nev­er fought. Brühl and Striesow dis­play seri­ous pathos, their faces as heavy and worn as the sol­diers’ boots – by focus­ing on this pair­ing, direc­tor Edward Berg­er pro­vides much-need­ed nuance away from Paul and his fel­low soldiers.

Much like Volk­er Bertelmann’s score, how­ev­er, which oscil­lates between del­i­cate strings and stab­bing synths, Berger’s film flits between minor and major keys with­out find­ing a har­mo­nious bal­ance. It’s a work­man­like addi­tion to the anti-war genre, and you’ve almost cer­tain­ly heard this tune before.

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