

A Midnight Clear
"At the frontlines of life, near the end of innocence, came the beginning of manhood."
OverView
In 1944 France, an American Intelligence Squad locates a German Platoon wishing to surrender rather than die in Germany's final war offensive. The two groups of men, isolated from the war at present, put aside their differences and spend Christmas together before the surrender plan turns bad and both sides are forced to fight the other.
A Midnight Clear Cast
A Midnight Clear Reviews

Wuchak
November 25, 2021_**Christmas is near on the snowy Western Front in WW2**_ In the beginning stages of the Battle of the Bulge in 1944, a reconnaissance patrol is sent ahead in the Ardennes forest on the border of France and Germany where they encounter some German soldiers. Who will survive to celebrate Christmas? âA Midnight Clearâ (1992) is an obscure artistic WW2 movie focusing on a patrol in the wintery sylvan landscapes of the Battle of the Bulge. Itâs more realistic than the surreal âCastle Keepâ (1969), but it reminds me a little of that arty flick. While a couple of scenes couldâve been more convincingly executed and some elements of the story are unlikely or weird, itâs almost an exact recounting of author William Whartonâs actual experiences (he wrote the 1982 novel the script was based on). Director/scriptwriter Keith Gordon desperately wanted to plainly state âThis is a true storyâ at the beginning, but the lawyers wouldnât allow it. As such, the supposed disclaimer during the end credits is vaguely worded for legal reasons. Speaking of Keith, you may remember him as the protagonist in âJaws 2â (1978) and, especially, âChristineâ (1982). In any case, I appreciated the wintery war ambiance in the woods with cast members from âPlatoonâ (Kevin Dillon and John C. McGinley), âDead Poets Societyâ (Ethan Hawke) and âForrest Gumpâ (Gary Sinise). I also liked the inventive approach, the music, and the depiction of this handful of young men united in a struggle of life and death. While the middle starts to get a little tedious and questionable there is a turning point and, from there, the film is quite compelling. The film closes with a haunting rendition of "It Came upon a Midnight Clear" by Sam Phillips as the credits scroll. I felt moved and reflected. The movie runs 1 hour, 48 minutes, and was shot in the Park City area of north-central Utah. GRADE: B
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