The Killing Fields (1984) - Britmovie - British Film Forum

Britmovie - British Film Forum Britmovie - British Film Forum Britmovie - British Film Forum
Home Page Register FAQ Members List Calendar Mark Forums Read

 »   Britmovie - British Film Forum » Cinema » Your Favourite British Films

Notices

Your Favourite British Films Name your favourite British film or make a case for an underrated classic.


Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 02-03-2007, 12:59 PM
  post #1
DB7
DB7 has no status.
Administrator
 
DB7's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Shrops
Gender: Male
Posts: 6,767
My Mood:
Country:
iTrader: (10)
Default The Killing Fields (1984)

The first casualty of war is ... people
Ian Johns on the powerful, Oscar-winning message of the modern classic The Killing Fields.

At a cost of about ÂŁ14 million, The Killing Fields (1984) was then the most ambitious project for David Puttnam, the producer of the Oscar-winning Midnight Express and Chariots of Fire . A piece in Time magazine had caught his eye. It told of the emotional reunion in Thailand in 1979 of Sydney Schanberg, a reporter for the The New York Times , with his former Cambodian aide, Dith Pran, who had escaped from four-and-a-half years of servitude under the brutal Khmer Rouge regime.

For the film, Puttnam followed his instinct to boost first-time directors (Alan Parker, Ridley Scott and Hugh Hudson) by choosing Roland Joffé, who had made his name with documentaries and political TV dramas.

“With a first-time director you don’t have a problem creating a team, because he doesn’t have a position to protect,” Puttnam has observed, noting that The Killing Fields marked the big-screen debut for many of the production team, including Chris Menges, who would win an Oscar for his cinematography. “A group applying themselves and working in harmony is better than an individual genius. Anyone talented will bust a gut on his first feature film.”

Bruce Robinson, who would later make the cult hit Withnail and I , delivered a script that heavily criticised US foreign policy in SouthEast Asia. Puttnam saw the film as more “about a friendship that happens to be set in a very emotive political context, not a political film with a friendship woven through it”.

The film is a tribute to Puttnam’s tenacity as a producer. With a third of the budget coming from Warner Bros he was under pressure to cast such big names as Dustin Hoffman and Gene Hackman as Schanberg and use a known director such as Sidney Lumet. But Puttnam didn’t want a star shifting the limelight from Pran; he later admitted that he may have exaggerated the dangers of shooting near the Thai-Cambodia border to put off Hollywood’s A-listers.

The self-effacing Sam Waterston got his first leading screen role as Schanberg. Pran was played by Haing S. Ngor, a doctor who had lost most of his family to the Khmer Rouge but managed to escape and make his way to Los Angeles. With grim irony, he would be shot dead in a robbery in LA in 1996. Puttnam praises Waterston’s coaching of Ngor, whose performance provides the core of the film’s emotional clout and earned him an Oscar.

For Joffé, despite delivering some nerve-jangling action, the film is not so much about war as people. “The idea was not to go in for masses of shocking imagery,” he says. “I wanted it to be a film about consequences. If there was an explosion it was not the major thing in the scene, but what the consequences of that act were.”

You can see this approach early on, as Schanberg and Pran visit a town mistakenly bombed by a US B52, with the emphasis on a wounded child and grieving people.

The film crew spent nearly 12 weeks shooting in Thailand, employing locals who had worked on The Deer Hunter and Platoon . The country’s military rulers were very cooperative, as they wanted the world to know about the Khmer Rouge in neighbouring Cambodia, a guerrilla force in the hills since being overthrown by the Vietnamese in 1979.

Puttnam was also impressed by the cooperation of the Americans — the evacuation of Phnom Penh was shot in San Diego using US Marines and helicopters. He finds it hard to imagine similar assistance being afforded today for a story about Iraq.

The film certainly has strong resonances today. It has since been shown in schools in the Ukraine and the Philippines to show how an imploded nation can lead to a futile civil war. “Maybe,” Puttnam says, “it should be playing in Iraq right now.”

What The Times film critic said at the time

“The Killing Fields is certainly a remarkable feat of logistics for the director Roland Joffé, making his first feature film after successive careers in theatre and television.”

“Bruce Robinson’s screenplay is admirable for its economy in exposition and dialogue.”

“The ambition of The Killing Fields is undeniable and creditable.”

“Joffé’s management of the vast crowds, exotic locations and broad panoramas marks him as an action director of the kind for whom the British cinema has rarely provided great scope.”

DB7 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-03-2007, 01:42 PM
  post #2
julian_craster has no status.
Senior Member
 
julian_craster's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Isle of Foula, UK
Posts: 1,817
Country:
iTrader: (0)
Default

Get it FREE with Saturday's TIMES
julian_craster is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-03-2007, 01:59 PM
  post #3
Steve Crook is cheeky
Moderator
 
Steve Crook's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: London
Gender: Male
Posts: 11,097
My Mood:
Country:
iTrader: (1)
Default

I always felt that they skipped over expressing what a shit the journalist Schanberg was for using Dith Pran as he did, right up to the end, and then callously abandoning him. And then when they did get back together, Pran was actually pleased to see him.

Steve
Steve Crook is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-03-2007, 02:35 PM
  post #4
Marky B is co-organising a one day marathon charity walk next year
Senior Member
 
Marky B's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Billingham,Cleveland
Gender: Male
Posts: 4,315
My Mood:
Country:
iTrader: (0)
Smile

Whenever I hear John Lennon's Imagine,I always think of the final moments of the film. A great film,certainly ranking the Best of British.
Ta Ta
Marky B

I am special. The heavens always open for me.
Marky B is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On
Forum Jump

All times are GMT. The time now is 07:51 PM.
SEO by vBSEO 3.2.0 ©2008, Crawlability, Inc.
Copyright © 1998-2008 BritMovie