Army sends a company of volunteers to patrol the uncharted western territories
Scenario
In the winter of 1862, during the Civil War, the U.S. Minervini built the set in Montana, then let the cast live in it for two months. The dialogue and thoughts expressed are those that the actors came up with while living in the wilderness and imagining themselves as soldiers in the Civil War.
All lacking military experience, they share knowledge and skills are transferred
We are not told where it is, we are not even told the names of the soldiers. After the regular troops leave, they find themselves under the command of a John Brown-style patriarch with a flowing beard, and his teenage sons have also enlisted. The troops are a mixed lot, some middle-aged, even elderly, most in their thirties.
We witness mobile sentries, shots at distant horsemen
A buffalo is shot and butchered, The bleak landscape, the hills, the mountain meadows, the drifting snow, the cold rations leaking, all contribute to a sense of existential despair that develops. A battle is taking place, we don’t see the enemy, we see the casualties of the unit. War is hell, especially when you don’t know why you’re there anymore.
Some of it is not welcome
A Ken Loach-style film, with no set dialogue from day to day and lots of ordinary people playing the actors, amateurs like the soldiers. This improvisation leads to philosophical, religious and political discussions around the campfires. But it’s a minor distraction from this raw picture of men at war.
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