Private Peaceful - Movie Review

  • 12 October 2012

Rating: 3 out of 5

The filmmakers tell this World War I story beautifully, but they never quite bring it to life as a proper movie. By taking a gently simplistic approach, it never feels like anything new as it deals with the usual topics of battlefield camaraderie, lost innocence and families torn apart by war.

It's set in early 1900s rural Devon, as the Peaceful family's idyllic life comes to an abrupt end when Dad dies. Now Hazel (Peake) and her three sons, Tommo, Charlie and simple-minded Joe (MacKay, O'Connell and Summercorn), must struggle to find enough work to survive. And when the war breaks out, Tommo lies about his age to go off to fight, partly because the girl he loves, Molly (Roach), turns out to be in love with Charlie. So out of guilt, Charlie joins him in the trenches. Which makes both Molly and Hazel worry if either of them will return home.

Based on the novel by Michael Morpurgo (War Horse), the film is packed with serious themes that contrast life on a Devon farm with the horrors of battle. The story is framed with scenes of Tommo in a military prison cell, and we have to wait until the end to find out what that's all about, which kind of waters down the impact of the harrowing scenes that come next. This is probably because everything that happens in the meantime reiterates the fact that fate goes where it will, and both good and bad people die in wartime.

All of the actors give wonderfully emotional performances, adding emotion and spark when things start feeling mopey, with particularly strong turns from MacKay and O'Connell and extra spice from Griffiths and de la Tour in mischievous cameos. But with such a straightforward approach, it all feels like a rather average TV production, never grappling with the more complex aspects of the story or characters. There are moments of raw realism along the way, but the sudden ending leaves us feeling oddly unmoved.

Rich Cline

Private Peaceful
Image caption Private Peaceful

Facts and Figures

Year: 2012

Genre: Dramas

Run time: 102 mins

In Theaters: Friday 12th October 2012

Distributed by: BBC Worldwide

Reviews

Contactmusic.com: 3 / 5

Rotten Tomatoes: 64%
Fresh: 16 Rotten: 9

IMDB: 6.2 / 10

Cast & Crew

Director: Pat O'Connor

Producer: Simon Reade, Guy de Beaujeu

Screenwriter: Simon Reade

Starring: Jack O'Connell as Charlie Peaceful, Richard Griffiths as The Colonel, Frances de la Tour as Grandma Wolf, John Lynch as Sergeant Hanley

Also starring: George MacKay, Alexandra Roach, Maxine Peake