G. I. Charlotte
+ another review by Cynthia Fuchs
Cate Blanchett was hot, hot, hot in 2001. Following
two critically acclaimed performances in 2000
(Elizabeth and The Talented Mr. Ripley),
Ms. Blanchett was seemingly everywhere last year. She
appeared in Barry Levinson's Bandits with Bruce
and Billy Bob, as well as a trio of holiday releases
-- The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the
Ring, The Shipping News and Charlotte
Gray.
She's certainly striking -- tall and dramatically
cheekboned -- as well as a fine actor. But, well,
overexposure and perhaps overwork have taken their
toll, and Blanchett's latest turns, especially in
LOTR and now (although a bit less so),
Charlotte Gray, are decidedly less than
fantastic. To make matters worse, Charlotte
Gray essentially repeats yet another film she made
last year, Sally Potter's torturous The Man Who
Cried. In both films, Cate plays a foreign girl
adrift in Vichy France, bearing witness to the
barbarities of WWII, the Nazi advance, and French
collaboration.
The good news is that Charlotte Gray is a far
better film than The Man Who Cried, despite the
fact that the Aussie actress's French accent here is
as labored as her Russian one in Potter's film. The
better news is that i>Charlotte Gray complicates
the moral high ground taken by recent cinematic
treatments of WWII, like the uber-popular Saving
Private Ryan and the less popular Pearl
Harbor, in which the Allies are only the victims
of Axis aggression, and their conduct in the war is
always righteous.
Blanchett plays the titular Charlotte Gray, a
smart-as-a-whip, no-nonsense young British woman with
a passion for classic literature and foreign languages
(she reads Stendahl in French, wouldn't you know).
After a brief and intense affair with a British pilot,
Peter Gregory (Rupert Penry Jones), who is lost
somewhere over France, Charlotte decides she cannot
sit idly by, and must do what she can for Mother
Britain. Well, this isn't entirely accurate, as what
she really hopes to do is go to France, to find Peter
herself.
In order to make her love-quest happen, Charlotte
enlists in a British women's unit. The following
scenes, which depict her military training and
indoctrination into the rules and etiquette of
espionage, are the most provocative in the film. This
is not only because of the rigorous basic training and
cultural education Charlotte and her co-spies must
undergo, but also because of the incipient gender
politics of the whole situation, which is based on
real-life cases of women spies.
Classical patriarchal logic and military tactics have
dictated that women were not to be directly involved
in warfare. Neither were civilians (or anyone who
"looked like" civilians). Indeed, such activities were
a source of anxiety for the U.S. during the Viet Nam
war, specifically, the Viet Cong's use of women and
children for covert action went against the
traditional, "civilized" rules of warfare. But
Charlotte Gray demonstrates that we, in the
"virtuous" and "moral" West, have not always followed
such logic or ideals either. We watch as the Brits
teach Charlotte hand-to-hand combat, endurance
training, and firearms. In short, we watch the Allies
teach her how to kill and then send her behind enemy
lines, disguised as a local immigrant from
Nazi-occupied Paris, in order to launch their own
shadowy machinations.
Once Charlotte arrives in Lezignac, France and meets
up with her local rebel leader, Julien (Billy Crudup),
things get much more complicated than she had
expected. Not only does she slowly fall in love with
the handsome insurgent (in the film's lamest plot
device), but as she plies her spy-trade, it becomes
increasingly difficult to tell exactly whom she is
working for, or what she is being used to do.
Espionage is dirty business. Forget nationalistic
ideology and all that glory of the motherland hoo-ha
-- there is nothing moral or ethical about warfare.
The most pointed insight of Charlotte Gray is
that war is messy, confusing, and violent, and even
more so on covert levels. It's also the best reason to
see the film (provided, of course, you can ignore its
rather
treacly love story), and where it diverges from most
recent WWII films.
The obvious reason for the glut of overly celebratory
WWII films of the past few years is nostalgia for a
time in American life when things like international
politics and warfare were clear-cut. During WWII,
there were clearly defined "sides"; it was "us" versus
"them," "good" versus "evil." There were no such
certainties during subsequent wars, as in Viet Nam or
even the Persian Gulf War, which brought to U.S.
public consciousness the concepts of friendly fire and
the Gulf War Syndrome.
These differential relationships of nation, and
specifically the US, to any war and how that war
becomes a part of public conscience also account for
the cinematic treatments these conflicts have been
given. In Viet Nam war films, there is rarely moral
high ground and nothing was ever certain (militarily,
politically). In relationship to WWII, on the other
hand, "we" have always known our position: we won. And
so we have Saving Private Ryan and Pearl
Harbor. Every once in a while, though, a movie
challenges the merely celebratory treatment WWII has
habitually been given in film. This is the case for
Charlotte Gray, which resists depicting WWII in
easy blacks and whites, and in doing so, challenges
the national ideologies, nostalgia, and idealization
that have become so commonplace in popular cultural
imaginings of the "great war."