As I get older, it becomes more and more difficult for me to watch movies starring the great actors who have accompanied my life of a cinephile and who have reached venerable ages. The feelings are mixed. On the one hand, I am glad that great actors like Michael Caine and Glenda Jackson (at her last role on screen) were still with us and that – far from being forgotten – they were cast in meaningful, age-appropriate roles and without unnecessary attempts at artificial rejuvenation in ‘The Great Escaper‘, the 2023 film by director Oliver Parker. On the other hand, many of these roles press too hard on the keys of melodrama and the risk is that instead of seeing the heroes of the film, we see the actors whose images from their youth are impossible to erase from our memories. It takes their immense talent to create the characters and push past biographies and creations into the shadows. The most representative film of this category is ‘Amour’. ‘The Great Escaper‘ does not reach the heights of Michael Haneke’s masterpiece, exposing in too many moments a predictable sentimentality. The main reason for watching remains the presence together on the same screen of the formidable couple of actors. But maybe that’s reason enough.
The script written by William Ivory is based on a true story, which happened in June 2014, when the 70th anniversary of D-Day – the landing of allied troops in Normandy – was celebrated. Bernard Jordan, a nearly 90-year-old British D-Day veteran, was living in a nursing home together with Rene, the woman he met during the war and with whom he has spent a lifetime which does not seem to have been marked by extraordinary events. The old man decided at the last minute to travel alone to France, to revisit the places where he had fought and to pay an old debt to a comrade-in-arms who had fallen on the blood-soaked beaches. His departure, unannounced to those who were taking care of him, created concern and then escalated into a media sensation.
The story has three parallel planes of action. The first takes place in the outside world, where the old veteran’s decision to undertake the journey across the Channel alone is regarded as an extraordinary fact, which inspires respect, but which is also ridiculously exaggerated by the press and television. Bernie becomes an unwilling hero of a day when true heroes are remembered. The second plane is that of the world of the old couple – a parallel world, where every movement and activity takes place at a different pace, where disease and death become companions, where memories continue to fuel the relationship that has overcome wars and time. The third plane is that of the memories and traumas of the war. That glorious day, celebrated 70 years after by presidents and queens, had been a day of horror and terror that had traumatized those who lived through it for the rest of their lives. What about Michael Caine and Glenda Jackson? At the age of their heroes, it is indistinguishable and irrelevant how much of what we see is acting and how much is living their own old age. What matters is that the two create in Bernie and Rene two heroes we care about, with whom we live the story and whom we would like to help like we do for the elders in our own families. I mention two more outstanding supporting roles: that of John Standing who plays another veteran traumatized by what happened in those days of June 1944 and carrying in his soul the guilt of losing his brother, and that of Danielle Vitalis – extremely natural and believable in the role to one of the nurses close to the old couple. The script does not manage to avoid clichés (for example the meeting with the veteran German soldiers) and does not run away from melodrama, on the contrary, it accentuates it. However, everything is balanced enough not to fall into ridicule, and the presence of the two great actors saves and ennobles the film.