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Published 23:27 17 Jul 2017 BST
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Bloodshed is minimal, though the endless threat of Dunkirk is nevertheless horrifying in many instances. The tagline 'Survival is victory' tells us what we need to know: it's not about Britain versus Germany, the Allies versus the Axis. It's about getting 400,000 men away from otherwise certain death.
Yet, Dunkirk is a British movie through and through, though a British movie made on an American budget, and one that takes care not to slip into 'Rule Britannia' pomposity. The soldiers themselves take no glory in their actions; indeed, the story does not allow them to. Instead, it is the civilian sailors sent to rescue them who are endowed with a sense of duty and purposefulness.
Nolan tells the story from three perspectives: land, sea and air, with each story strand covering a week, a day and an hour respectively. It's a bold narrative choice and expertly executed. The film itself runs at 107 minutes, nearly half the length of his last film Interstellar. It's a tightly-wound, ticking clock, counting down to either annihilation or escape.
In Dunkirk, as he has with almost all of his major films, Nolan has assembled a terrific ensemble cast, comprised of established British acting legends (Mark Rylance, Kenneth Branagh, Tom Hardy) and exciting newcomers (Fionn Whitehead, Barry Keoghan, Tom Glynn-Carney), all of whom commit and deliver.
And Harry Styles? Your eyebrows can be lowered: yes, he can act and he does a good job in Dunkirk. No one performer stands out, but plaudits must go to Fionn Whitehead, who carries much of the moral weight of the film.
As well as a loud and large staging of war, with thousands of extras cowering beneath real planes in the shadow of real destroyers, many of Dunkirk's most heart-pounding moments are the choices characters make and the questions they raise: what is the point of survival if you can't live with yourself afterwards?
Christopher Nolan has long been a member of a select group of directors whose name alone is enough to draw an audience; no other director could convince an American movie studio to finance a blockbuster war film that has nothing to do with America. In Dunkirk, he has produced his greatest effort to date, a verifiable masterpiece that will no doubt loom large when awards season comes around.
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