Faith remained unbroken

Angelina Jolie with Louis Zamperini, whose life story is retold in the movie Unbroken. Picture: AP Phot/Universal Pictures

Since the end of hostilities in 1945, writers and filmmakers have turned to World War II as a source of rich dramatic source material.

The treatment of Prisoners of War by their Japanese captors has featured prominently, with The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957), Merry Christmas, Mr Lawrence (1983), and The Railway Man (2013) just three of the most well-known films to explore the subject.

And unless you have been living under a rock for the past decade or so, you will know how gruesome that subject can be.

While Angelina Jolie, cinematographer Roger Deakins, a quartet of writers and an outstanding ensemble of actors have undeniably made an excellent film, Unbroken struggles to bring any new insight or justification to the essential conflict, which it pursues with relentless, almost breathless, vigour.

Louis Zamperini’s (superbly portrayed by Jack O’Connell) story is an incredible one, and the best of Unbroken is when the film focuses on the extraordinary good fortune that ensured Zamperini’s continued survival against all the odds.

It is little wonder that Zamperini made a pact with God to serve Him for the rest of his life if he was to survive the horrors that he endured on a daily basis — a pact Zamperini held to until he died in July last year.

Mutsuhiro Watanabe’s (Takamasa Ishihara) obsession with breaking Zamperini’s body and spirit becomes, simply, incomprehensible, and Unbroken’s bleak, brutal and unforgiving second act becomes harder and harder to watch.

It is one of the most perfect films about the power of an unbreakable Faith — especially in oneself — in recent memory.

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