"
It's based on a true story." Or "It's truth, but stranger than fiction." Or even, "You couldn't make it up." When
Peter Weir gets sent film scripts these days, most of them advertise themselves as "true." That wasn't always the case:
Weir (who made
Gallipoli,
Witness, and
Master and Commander, among other movies) dates the tilt away from fiction and toward fact back to
Sept. 11, 2001, the day when reality suddenly seemed "exactly like a
Hollywood movie."
The growth of reality television surely explains the change, too. So does
Hollywood's bottom line. "
Reality is a brand which people can sell" says
Peter Morgan, who wrote the script for
The Queen—a movie based on the (true) story of
Diana, Princess of Wales: "If people need to explain what a film is about, the film stands very little chance of surviving."
In a world where so many movies, books, and
TV programs jostle for attention, familiar historical stories—
World War II,
Watergate—get an extra boost.
True, familiar, and recent stories are even better. The tale of that
Harvard student who invented
Facebook and made a billion dollars comes to mind. So does the saga of the hiker who cut off his arm.
But what about stories that are true but totally unfamiliar? Do we—can we—still watch people in real situations of a kind we've never thought about before?
As it happens, Weir's latest movie,
The Way Back, might answer this question.
For The Way Back is a unique and groundbreaking film: It represents Hollywood's first attempt, ever, to portray the
Soviet Gulag in meticulously researched detail. I know this to be true because I was a historical consultant to
Weir. He asked me for advice because I wrote a book about the
Gulag, but he did plenty of research on his own, as his questions reflected.
Once, he called to ask whether the guards leading the prisoners off the train would have been wearing the same uniforms as the guards receiving them at the camp. (
Answer: no.)
The Way Back is based on a book called
The Long Walk,by
Slawomir Rawicz, a Gulag survivor who "borrowed" his escape story: Three
Poles crossed the Himalayas from
Siberia into
India in the
1940s; the
Polish consulate recorded their arrival; one of them told his story to
Rawicz. But the film is true in every way that matters. Many of the camp scenes are taken directly from
Soviet archives and memoirs. The starving men scrambling for garbage, the tattooed criminals playing cards for the clothes of other prisoners, the narrow barracks, the logging camp, the vicious
Siberian storms. Among the very plausible characters are an
American who went to work
on the Moscow subway and fell victim to the
Great Terror of
1937, a Polish officer arrested after the
Soviet invasion of Poland in
1939, and a
Latvian priest whose church was destroyed by the Bolsheviks.
These scenes and people are realistic. But they are definitely not familiar.
I've found at least one review that situates the story during "
Hitler's reign over
Poland," failing to note that
Stalin reigned over Poland then, too. I've also read complaints about the lack of sexual tension between the escaped convicts and the teenage girl they pick up along the way ("the real-life threat of rape never appears"). But in "real life," these rough-looking men were from nice central
European homes, as the presence of the girl reminds them.
Rape would have been out of character.
I haven't found any reviews, so far, that hail this as Hollywood's first Gulag movie, perhaps because hardly anyone noticed that there weren't any before. Weir told me that many in Hollywood were surprised by the story: They'd never heard of
Soviet concentration camps, only
German ones. If you need to explain what a film is about, the film is in trouble—and this one almost was. Weir had difficulties getting it distributed and some problems explaining the final scene to his financial backers.
Yet that final scene is exactly what makes this movie "real":
Instead of returning home at the end of his harrowing journey, the hero is shown "walking" across time—across the
Soviet occupation of central
Europe, across the
Hungarian Revolution of 1956, the
Prague Spring of
1968—finally returning home to Poland only after communism collapses. The absence of an instant happy ending also bothers some of the film's reviewers, even though, in "real life," there were no happy endings for anyone who lived in the eastern half of Europe after the end of World War II.
People who escaped from the Gulag, survived the war, or evaded the
Holocaust didn't necessarily live happily ever after.
Perhaps that's a truth too difficult to learn from a movie.
- published: 12 Jan 2012
- views: 499836