They were individuals who - in some cases - held pretty high rank in the police or military, were, some of them, fairly close to retirement, but others were in their 30s, or 40s, or 50s, - and whose parents would have been alive (and serving, in some instances) during the war. Obviously, they would have been born post WW2, but with parents, (or grandparents) who had served, so family lore also informed their opinions.
These were bar conversations, late at night, close to closing time, with slow and deep and thoughtful conversation, and they were critiquing details, the old 'it was worse than that, in reality' sort of critique, and thought some of the stories were a little too pat and neat (but that is movie or TV story telling).
By contrast, these guys all loved 'Das Boot' which they thought a superb portrayal of war, and an outstanding German production. In fact, at least two of them informed me that 'Das Boot' was their all time very favourite movie (or TV series, as it was both).
My rambling reply...
My observation is when it comes to telling a coherent war story that an audience can stand to sit though, some liberties must be taken to keep it from becoming just a rambling series of images. That's the filmmaker's job (as you know). Unbroken was 2hr 20min, but it felt longer than that. I did not need to see that much suffering to get the idea. Now that was a "they survived" and specifically "I'm tough enough to take your abuse" pow film, but honestly I have limited tolerance to watch just a "they survived" story. The individual portrayed in Unbroken was inspirational although the telling was a little flat imo. While it might just be Hollywood, I really enjoyed the plots of The Great Escape, Bridge Over The River Kwai and Stalag 17. An overriding plot in the setting makes these stories pop, not just surviving.That can be the problem, sometimes complete realism is boring.
... Except for combat which ideally is, but not necessarily coherent. For examples of realistic and/or surreal combat environments from an individual perspective, I'd say it was the Normandy invasion portion of Saving Private Ryan, the climactic firefight in Platoon, the Vietnam portion of Forrest Gump and even the crazyness of Apocalypse Now. If a battle is being scripted, to some degree it helps if it makes sense to the audience. In Generation War the focus was on these individuals, interpersonal relationships, and although the combat scenarios while limited, they were good enough to advance the story. The push into (Kursk?) was good, city fighting the Russians to take a telegraph station.
I'm sure that many Germans suffered immediately after cessation of hostilities, but this was not addressed specifically in this film. At this point the story was being wrapped up. Suffering due to weather and lack of supplies on the Western front was touched on, but the misery not dwelled on. I was ok with that. I do imagine a generation emerging from WWII suffering from PTSD.
I can remember scenes, but don't remember if I've seen Das Boot in its entirety. Maybe I'll watch it again.
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