Wicki plots the film as a virulent anti-war statement, but there's nothing superficial or polemical about his aims; he allows the events to unfold with an internal logic that, while tragic and coincidental in the case of why the boys are left alone to guard a bridge, attempts to depict a firefight with the rousing excitement often found in more patriotic war films, only altered by the knowledge that, indeed, these _are_ just boys staring down the barrel of a gun.
Clayton Dillard
juin 15, 2015