The ‘War On Terror’ Films You’ve Been Waiting For
by John NolteA military plane out on standard patrol flies over a small, coastal fishing village. Everything appears normal except … the wrong flag flies. A radio alert brings a cautious patrol of foot soldiers. Wary, and with rifles drawn, they approach. Something’s wrong, very wrong. There’s no human sound. No smoke from chimneys. The village is dead.
Not “dead” as in quiet or deserted, dead as in littered with corpses. Bodies carpet the ground. Soldiers, farmers, shopkeepers, mothers and daughters lie everywhere. A savage fight took place here. A battle waged with machine guns, rifles, swords, clubs, pitch forks, and fists. The massacre is a tangle of family, neighbor and foe.
What led to the carnage was a debate among 800 everyday citizens over whether or not they would allow evil to stand. The villagers were realistic. The debate was not over whether or not they would triumph, for they knew they couldn’t. The debate was over whether or not the act of making a stand was worth certain death.
This debate took place at night in a church where no one dared look at the other. Worried about discovery, they could only stare straight ahead. Evil was watching and had to be fooled into believing this was just another church service.
Some wanted the fight, others, good people, believed the evil might pass, but the worst among them – the quislings – argued evil might be appeased. All, however, well knew the consequences. They weren’t the first village forced to make this choice. Just up the coast there was another who chose to fight. They lost, and the reprisals were unspeakable.
The questions raised in that small church might sound familiar: Won’t fighting back make things worse? Why die for something as old-fashioned as the idea of country? Is freedom worth killing another? Doesn’t killing them make us them?
The film is “Edge of Darkness,” produced in 1943 and starring Errol Flynn, Ann Sheridan, Walter Huston and Ruth Gordon. The flag that flew was a Norwegian one during the Nazi occupation.
Don’t let the date fool you, “Edge of Darkness” is about our present-day War on Terror, and unlike what we’ve seen from Big Hollywood these last couple years, “Edge of Darkness” answers those questions the only way they should be answered.
One of the great myths created by Those Who Write about the Movies is that WWII-era films are nothing more than simple, jingoistic propaganda. Set aside the fact that the real definition of “jingoism” is The Kind Of Patriotism the Left Doesn’t Like – that myth is a creation of those determined to deconstruct any and all things good and American.
“Edge of Darkness” is filled with more nuance and complicated relationships and situations than all of Big Hollywood’s pro-abandon-the-Iraqi-people films put together. Of course there are exceptions, but many, many WWII films are so beautifully crafted they still speak to us, which is why we still watch them. These films transcend the politics of the day because their stories aren’t about the politics of the day. They’re about timeless themes of liberty, bravery, honor and sacrifice. WWII wasn’t the story. WWII was where the story was set.
These are the War on Terror films you’ve been waiting for.
What is or isn’t showing up at your local Cineplex shouldn’t frustrate you. Everything you want from Hollywood has already been produced, and done so with smarter scripts, better special effects, real movie stars, and reasonable runtimes. If you’re hungry for heroes and self-sacrifice and the ennobling of the human spirit and to see evil confronted by good, you need not wait for Big Hollywood see the light.
“Edge of Darkness” isn’t available on DVD but Turner Classic Movies airs it now and again along with hundreds of other smart, sophisticated, complex films ready to fill the emotional hole Big Hollywood won’t.
Over the coming weeks this site will spotlight the War on Terror films you’ve been waiting for that just happen to have been produced during WWII. Not the famous ones we all know, but like “Edge of Darkness,” gems awaiting your discovery.
As long as there’s a civilization, Classic Hollywood’s World War II films will live on. As long as there’s cut-out bins, Big Hollywood’s “In the Valley of Elahs” will gather dust.
Thanks to Classic Hollywood we don’t need Big Hollywood.







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This WWII era Disney cartoon says more about the War on Terror than any “War on Terror” move made by Hollywood:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nvp3zAPraF4
Looking forward to seeing more in this series.
As a companion piece, read “Snow Treasure” by Marie McSwigan, as you share family time this week. Snow Treasure is based on the amazing Norwegian children who smuggled Norway’s gold out from under the eyes of the Nazis.
Just as there are great movies to watch, there are great books to read with your kids. I am horrified and appalled when I see good kids grow up to be liberals because their parents didn’t realize what was happening to them in the schools. There’s no point in being a conservative if you let your kids get poisoned by liberals.
I have never seen that cartoon. I was a big Warner Bros fan growing up.
It was great.
Yes, the British Broadcasting Corporation is big on making “Hollywood’s versions” of films.
Moron.
John,
I’m glad you’re the Editor of this site. I started reading this in my RSS feed without catching the author’s name and I realized it had to be one of yours. Your clarity shines through.
Wish I could see this. As I’ve lamented many times, TCM is not amongst the 80 channels I get with Basic Charter Cable here in Rochester. It has to be on DVD someday, right?
I have noticed that almost all WWII films have a great understanding of the GWOT (Global War On Terror). None of todays Film Makers (or incoming policy makers) have no understanding of the enemy we face.
[...] Now These are “War on Terror” Movies January 16, 2009 Posted by Jehuda in Uncategorized. Tags: Film, Politics, News, Entertainment trackback John Nolte reveals where to find “War on Terror” movies with a well-defined moral center. [...]
Way to go John, that’s what brought me to that other great site you had. Reviews of great movies that I had no idea existed.
We can argue the philosophies all day long. Israel does not have that luxury. She fights for her very existence. As Brigette Gabriel states: We are in the fight of our lives and we do NOT know the enemy. They want us dead and will do anything to see to it. Lie, cheat, steal. Lie low. Pretend to be ‘moderate’. For Islam is nothing close to ‘moderate’. They ran an empire for 1400 years and intend to take it back. They do not care how bloody the murder, they intend to do it. OVER our dead bodies.
I am with GrowlTiger. We face the worst Evil known to civilized man and we equivacate, whine and tear at our President every chance they get.
Now that Obama , Mr. Hussein Obama is to be sworn in the message to Islam is loud and clear: Weakness, equivacation, moral equivalence will reign the day. We will be lucky if that is ALL we have to deal with.
Terrorists are just waiting for the all clear. Innaugaration day is the clarion call.
Meanwhile Hollywood is making movies like “Milk” ??
Give me Lord of The Rings. Gran Torino. The Great Raid and as mentioned, Edge of Darkness. Reading Snow Treasure about the children of Norway taking the Gold out of Norway under the Nazi’s nose. Movies like Defiance. These are the things that should be filling our minds. Reading Brigette Gabriel and watching her videos. Listening to her life story, for hers IS a cautionary tale and one we had better heed much better than we have so far.
Hear, Hear, GrowlTiger!
Rambler,
I think the only way Gandhi’s philosophies would ever work would be if they are used against a civilized enemy. I’m not here to knock the guy or his results, but he has said some pretty ambiguous things.
“The Jews should have offered themselves to the butcher’s knife,” he said. “They should have thrown themselves into the sea from cliffs.”
If there wasn’t courageous Heroes willing to fight evil we wouldn’t have liberty at all.
For Ghandi it was easy to be a pacifist in a British controlled India.
The Nazis, or todays terrorists would’ve killed him without blinking.
Pacifism doesn’t require sacrifice, so it helps no one. It protects no one. Jesus said: “no greater love than this, that a man lays his life down for his friends.”
Well, no one can lay their life down for their friends or risk it without fighting evil.
Ghandi did some good things but I have no respect for pacifism.
You hit the nail on the head. SOME WWII films might be considered pure propaganda, but many, if not most, are worthwhile and of those, a good number are pure genius and comment so beautifully on the human condition that they are worth owning and watching over and again.
BTW, BEN USN, you are correct re: Ghandi. He took few real risks. He brought about a good deal of violence by his actions, which does not qualify him as a pacifist anyway. As you said, the Nazis or Stalinists would have shot him down summarily.
Thanks, John, good points.
The reason we are in no way whatsoever like our enemies is the goals we have: Life, Liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
The goals of evil is the opposite of that. Not to mention we don’t target innocents. Evil, be it in the form of Fascism, Communism, Radical Islam/terrorism, Totalitarianism, Anarchy or any combination thereof has no problem targeting innocents to get what they want.
Socialism and Pacifism, despite good intentions, will also result in an erosion and eventual destruction of Liberty.
There’s nothing wrong with propaganda that shows the Good, True and Beautiful aspects of Liberty.
Rambler, Ghandi had the luxury of fighting against fairly civilized foes. The British were the British, and the islamic faction that Ghandi sparred with in his later days was populated by kittens in comparison to those we find today. Your modern, garden-variety islamic terrorist doesn’t give a damn what your convictions are, only that they don’t match his own and he will gladly kill you for them.
“Edge of Darkness” (1943) is available on videocassette, used. My library has a copy.
Please add “The Final Option” to your list of reality films. It shows the leftist “useful idiots” being further manipulated into “Dhimmis.”
Thanks John, I will search for that one.
I think it is sad that while Hollywood produces trashy films stabbing the Iraq and Afghanistan troops in the back, so many GREAT stories that would have instantly been produced during WWII are ignored.
Movies such as the fight to rescue the body of a lost SEAL on top of Takur Ghar in Aghanistan as chronicled in “Not a Good Day to Die” by Sean Naylor would actgually turn a profit – undoubtedly many times over. But Hollywood is content to lose money on crap such as Elah as long as it gives the producers street cred with the anti-American crowd.
I just finished watching “Edge of Darkness”… that hamm’d up acting in those days aside… an amazingly mature film about raw courage… what has happened to Hollywood?
Had GW Bush not had to fight wars on TWO fronts (Hollywood on the one hand, and terrorists on the other), one might expect that we would be out of Iraq by now, given that Hollywood (the Public Relations arm of Terrorist Recruitment for Islam) has done all it could to increase terrorist “enlistment” on the one hand, then shutting down US military enlistment on the other…
I would be surprised if Hollywood could stand up to Nazi Germany today… after all, the Nazis acted on Darwinian doctrine in a most agressive way… something that on one level would be the delight of Hollywood.
I bought it from Amazon based on this review. We loved it.
I can see you haven't changed…….by the way, if you want to keep trying to prove your intelligence to the masses, you should come up with a new word other than egregious…..it's getting old. Freedom of speech has never been a good thing where you are concerned.
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