Glory

Glory

Hype can be a dangerous thing, and the newspaper ads touting Days of Glory (aka Indigenes, French for "Indigenous") as "so powerful it changed the world" are nigh on impossible for any movie to live up to. This one doesn't, but director Rachid Bouchareb's World War II drama still makes for compelling viewing. Confronting the Nazis both in Italy and at home in 1943, the French Army recruits men from Algeria, then a French colony, and other North Africans to help out. Of the film's two principal themes, one, the horrors of war, is nothing new. But the battle scenes are well done; the first major clash, on a bleak Italian hillside, effectively conveys the young Muslims' confusion and abject terror. The second theme is clearly the one that inspired Bouchareb in the first place: the eternal issue of race and discrimination (also explored in 1989's Glory, about black soldiers in the Civil War). Focusing in particular on four Algerians, including Jamel Debbouze as the naïve Saïd and Roschdy Zem as the lovestruck Messaoud, the films depicts how they are denied basics like food, mail delivery, time off, and such, effectively rendering meaningless the French ideal of liberty, equality, and brotherhood. It all culminates in a small town in Alsace, where the four find brief respite before having to face a much larger and better equipped German force (this scene, as well as a final bit in a cemetery, carry heavy echoes of Steven Spielberg's Saving Private Ryan). Bouchareb apparently made Days of Glory at least in part to shame the French government into handing over long-frozen pensions to surviving soldiers and their kin. French president Jacques Chirac finally approved the funds in 2006--apparently after seeing this film. So maybe it did change the world a little after all. --Sam Graham

Genre: Drama, History, War
Director(s): Edward Zwick
Production: TriStar
  Won 3 Oscars. Another 11 wins & 18 nominations.
 
IMDB:
7.9
Rotten Tomatoes:
93%
R (Restricted)
Year:
1989
122
4,775 Views

Trip:
See, the way I figure, I figure this war would be over a whole lot sooner if you boys just turned right on around and headed back on down that way, and you let us head on up there where the real fighting is.

Union Soldier:
There's men dyin' up that road.

Trip:
And there wouldn't be nothing but rebs dyin' if they'd let the 54th in it.

Union Solder:
Listen-

[Men of both regiments argue and begin fighting]

Sgt. Maj. John Rawlins:
Hold it! As you were, Trip! As you were! [To the Connecticut soldiers] You men move on.

10th Connecticut Corporal:
[Scoffing as he notices Rawlins' rank] Stripes on a n*gger. That's like tits on a bull!

Sgt. Maj. John Rawlins:
You're lookin' at a higher rank, Corporal. You'll obey and like it.

10th Connecticut Corporal:
Make me.

Trip:
I'll make you!

[The 10th Connecticut soldiers push forward again and the fight resumes; Major Forbes arrives on his horse]

Major Cabot Forbes:
WHAT THE HELL IS GOING ON HERE?! [The fighting immediately stops]

Sgt. Maj. John Rawlins:
Attention!

Major Cabot Forbes:
[Pointing at the 10th Connecticut Corporal] You! Yes, you! What's your name? I'm putting you up on charges!

[The Corporal freezes in fear, unable to speak]

Sgt. Maj. Rawlins:
Ain't no cause for that, sir.

Major Cabot Forbes:
What's that, Sergeant?

Sgt. Maj. John Rawlins:
It's just a soldiers' fight, sir.

Major Cabot Forbes:
All right. You men move along. [pause] MOVE IT!

[The 54th resumes its work and the 10th Connecticut continues marching; the Corporal looks at Rawlins briefly, then rejoins his unit.]

General Charles Harker:
Ah, Shaw. Sit down. [Shaw remains standing] Well, Colonel, what can I do for you?

Colonel Robert G. Shaw:
You can give me and my regiment a transfer to combat command.

General Charles Harker:
Couldn't do it, Colonel. You're much too valuable to my operations here.

Colonel Robert G. Shaw:
[after a long pause] May I sit? [Harker motions for Shaw to sit.] Thank you. [to Major Forbes] Major. [Shaw and Forbes both sit down] I've written a letter to my father, asking him to press Governor Andrew and President Lincoln. But I don't have to wait for all that, do I?

General Charles Harker:
[to Colonel Montgomery] Colonel Montgomery, would you bring that ashtray over here?

[Colonel Montgomery stops playing the piano and walks over to the desk with an ashtray. General Harker lights a cigar]

Colonel Robert G. Shaw:
But valuable to your operations here, do you say? Your foraging, your depredations? Yes, I've become quite a student of your operations in this region. Thirty-four mansions, I think it was, pillaged and burned under Colonel Montgomery's expedition of the Combahee. Four thousand bales of cotton smuggled through the lines with payment to parties unknown, except by you. False quartermaster requisitions. Major Forbes here has seen the copies.

Major Cabot Forbes:
Yes, indeed. Along with confiscated valuables shipped north as personal baggage.

Colonel Robert G. Shaw:
Shall I go on?

General Charles Harker:
Can you?

Colonel Robert G. Shaw:
I can report you to the War Department. Oh, yes. I can do that.

General Charles Harker:
[stands] Let you take your regiment out to fight. That's what you want, isn't it? Show what they can do.

Colonel Robert G. Shaw:
When?

General Charles Harker:
[chuckles] You are bright-eyed, aren't you?

Colonel Robert G. Shaw:
When?

General Charles Harker:
Just as soon as I can write the orders.

[The 54th has just entered the mostly deserted town of Darien]

Sgt. Maj. John Rawlins:
Town's clean, sir. Ain't no Rebs here, just some women.

Colonel James M. Montgomery:
Well, all right. You here that, boys? Let's clear her out!

[the soldiers start looting the town]

Colonel Robert G. Shaw:
What are you doing?

Sgt. Maj. John Rawlins:
Liberating this town in the name of the Republic.

Soldier:
The musket, master Colonel. Never shoot it. Shoot now?

Colonel James M. Montgomery:
Yeah, I don't see why not. Go ahead.

Soldier:
Shoot the lady, boys! [shoots at figurehead on hotel]

Man:
[runs out] Don't shoot! We ain't Secesh here!

Colonel Robert G. Shaw:
That man is a civilian!

Colonel James M. Montgomery:
That man is Secesh, and Secesh is all the same, son. [the soldiers fire at the man, who runs off] Look around you, look at 'em. You really think anybody's gonna put some boys into some real combat? Do you? I mean, they're little children for God's sake. Little monkey children. You just gotta learn how to control them.

[A scream is heard, Shaw and Montgomery look over to see a soldier fighting with a white woman and her black servant over some silverware]

Colonel James M. Montgomery:
You see what I mean? Children.

Woman:
[hits soldier] Animal! Leave her alone! [the soldier grabs and starts choking her]

Colonel James M. Montgomery:
Hey, boy! Take your hands off the white lady. [the soldier ignores him, Montgomery pulls out his pistol and shoots the man dead] Now that would not have been necessary if that Secesh woman hadn't started it. They'll never learn. You see, Secesh has got to be swept away by the hand of God, like the Jews of old. And now I'll have to burn this town.

Woman:
N*gger soldiers! N*GGER SOLDIERS!

Colonel James M. Montgomery:
Tell your men to set torches and prepare to fire the buildings.

Colonel Robert G. Shaw:
I will not.

Colonel James M. Montgomery:
That is an order. You will do it, or you will be brought up on charges for disobeying your superior officer.

Colonel Robert G. Shaw:
It is an immoral order, and by articles of war, I am not bound to obey it.

Colonel James M. Montgomery:
Well, you can just explain that at your court-martial. After your men are placed under my command.

Colonel Robert G. Shaw:
[long pause, to his men] First squad, second platoon. Fall out to set torches. Prepare to fire the town.

Sgt. Maj. John Rawlins:
First squad, second platoon! Fall out!

[The soldiers proceed to set fire to the buildings]

General George Strong:
[addressing his officers] No one will ever take Charleston without first silencing the forts which protect its harbor. And the first one that must be taken is that: Fort Wagner. [points to Fort Wagner in the distance] Wagner mounts a 10-inch Columbiad, three smoothbore 32-pounders, a 42-pound carronade, a 10-inch coast mortar, and four 12-pound howitzers, plus a garrison of about a thousand men. As many of you gentlemen may be aware, over the last four days, our Navy has weakened Wagner with a constant barrage. Headquarters has determined a time for our attack. We will proceed with a direct frontal assault tomorrow at dusk. The problem, gentlemen, is the approach. The ocean and the marsh leave only a narrow strip of sand, a natural defile through which we can only send one regiment at a time. Now our best hope is that leading regiment can keep the Rebs occupied long enough for reinforcements to exploit the breach. Needless to say, casualties in the leading regiment may be extreme.

Colonel Robert G. Shaw:
General Strong. The 54th Massachusetts requests the honor of leading the attack on Fort Wagner.

General George Strong:
It's Colonel Shaw, isn't it?

Colonel Robert G. Shaw:
Yes, sir.

General George Strong:
You and your men haven't slept in two days.

Colonel Robert G. Shaw:
That's right sir.

General George Strong:
You think they have the strength to lead this charge?

Colonel Robert G. Shaw:
There's more to fighting than rest, sir. There's character. There's strength of heart. You should have seen us in action two days ago. We were a sight to see! We'll be ready, sir. When do you want us?


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