February 26, 2012
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Well in advance of the 2014 centennial of the beginning of “the war
to end all wars,” the First World War is suddenly everywhere in our
lives. Stephen Spielberg’s War Horse opened on 2,376 movie screens and has collected six Oscar nominations, while the hugely successful play it’s based on is still packing in the crowds in New York and a second production is being readied to tour the country.
In addition, the must-watch TV soap opera of the last two months, Downton Abbey,
has just concluded its season on an unexpected kiss. In seven
episodes, its upstairs-downstairs world of forbidden love and dynastic
troubles took American viewers from mid-war, 1916, beyond the Armistice,
with the venerable Abbey itself turned into a convalescent hospital for
wounded troops. Other dramas about the 1914-1918 war are on the way,
among them an HBO-BBC miniseries based on Ford Madox Ford’s Parade’s End quartet of novels, and a TV adaptation of Sebastian Faulks’s novel Birdsong from an NBC-backed production company.
In truth, there’s nothing new in this. Filmmakers and novelists have
long been fascinated by the way the optimistic, sunlit, pre-1914 Europe
of emperors in plumed helmets and hussars on parade so quickly turned
into a mass slaughterhouse on an unprecedented scale. And there are good
reasons to look at the First World War carefully and closely. READ MORE
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