| Kirk Douglas, Ralph Meeker, Adolphe
Menjou , George Macready, Wayne Morris, Richard Anderson
Adapting Humphrey Cobb's novel to the
screen, director Stanley Kubrick and his collaborators Calder Willingham
and Jim Thompson set out to make a devastating anti-war statement,
and they succeeded above and beyond the call of duty. In the third
year of World War I, the erudite but morally bankrupt French general
Broulard (Adolphe Menjou) orders his troops to seize the heavily
fortified "Ant Hill" from the Germans. General Mireau
(George MacReady) knows that this action will be suicidal, but he
will sacrfice his men to enhance his own reputation. Against his
better judgment, Colonel Dax (Kirk Douglas) leads the charge, and
the results are appalling. When, after witnessing the slaughter
of their comrades, a handful of the French troops refuse to leave
the trenches, Mireau very nearly orders the artillery to fire on
his own men. Still smarting from the defeat, Mireau cannot admit
to himself that the attack was a bad idea from the outset: he convinces
himself that loss of Ant Hill was due to the cowardice of his men.
Mireau demands that three soldiers be selected by lot to be executed
as an example to rest of the troops. Acting as defense attorney,
Colonel Dax pleads eloquently for the lives of the unfortunate three,
but their fate is a done deal. Even an eleventh-hour piece of evidence
proving Mireau's incompetence is ignored by the smirking Broulard,
who is only interested in putting on a show of bravado. A failure
when first released (it was banned outright in France for several
years), Paths of Glory has since taken its place in the pantheon
of classic war movies, its message growing only more pertinent and
potent with each passing year (it was especially popular during
the Vietnam era). |