Civil War movie review & film summary (2024) | Roger Ebert (2024)

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Civil War movie review & film summary (2024) | Roger Ebert (1)

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Whatever you expect from an Alex Garland movie, he alwaysgives you something else."Civil War" is something else again. It premiered in the US hours before I published this and it'salready divisive. I look forward to reading allofthe arguments for and against, even though both earlyraves and pans seem to be operating under the reductiveassumption that it's one of three things:(1) analternative future history of a divided United States that's intended as a cautionary tale; (2)a technically proficient but empty-headed misery p*rn compendium that derives much of its power from images redolent of genocide and/or lynching, butducks political specifics so as not to offend reactionaries; or(3) a visionary spectacular with ultra-violence that might or might not have something important to say but will definitely look and sound great on an expensive home entertainment system.

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As it turns out, "Civil War"is mainly something else: a thought experiment about journalistic ethics, set in afuture United States, yetreminiscent of classic movies about Westernjournalists covering the collapse of foreign countries, such as "The Year of Living Dangerously," "Salvador," "Under Fire," and "Welcome to Sarajevo."

How utterly bizarre, you might think. And in the abstract, it is bizarre. But "Civil War" is afuriously convincing and disturbing thingwhen you're watching it. It's a great movie that has its own life force. It's not like anything Garland has made. It's not like anything anyone has made, even though it contains echoes of dozens of other films (and novels) that appear to have fed the filmmaker's imagination.

Specifically, and most originally, "Civil War" isa portrait of the mentality of pure reporters, the types of people who are less interested in explaining what things "mean" (in the manner of an editorial writer or "pundit")than in getting the scoopbefore the competition, by any means necessary.Whetherthe scooptakes the form of a written story, a TVnews segment, or a still photo that wins a Pulitzer, the quest for the scoop isan end unto itself, and it's bound up withthe massive dopamine hit thatthat comes from putting oneself in harm's way. The kinds of obsessive war correspondents who rarely come back to their own countries don't care about the real-world impact of the political realities encoded within the epic violence they chronicle,or else compartmentalize it to stay focused.

Themain characters of "CivilWar"are four journalists. The film introduces themcovering a clash in New YorkCitybetween what appear to be police forces from the official government and violent members of the opposition (we have to infer a lot because Garland drops you right into the deep end, as Haskell Wexler did in "Medium Cool," about a news cameraman covering the 1968 protests in Chicago). Kirsten Dunst plays Lee, a legendary white femalephotojournalist in the mold of her namesake Lee Miller. She'spartnered with a South American-bornreporter namedJoel (Wagner Moura). Both work for Reuters news agency andare fond of Sammy (veteran character actorStephen McKinley Henderson), an older African-American journalist who writes for “what’s left of the New York Times,” as Joel puts it; he walks slowly on a cane, definitely a liability when covering protests and battles.

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The group gains a fourth member, Jessie (Cailee Spaeny, the title character of "Priscilla"), a kind of junior version of Leewho idolizes her.Jessie charms the hard-drinking, on-the-prowl Joel and ends up joining the trio as they drive toWashington,D.C. in hopes of interviewing the president (Nick Offerman)before he surrenders to the military forcesof something called the WA, orWestern Alliance. The WAconsists of militias fromCalifornia and Texas (with secondary support from Florida, which is apparently a different separatist group that shares the WA's values).

The first full-length trailer for "Civil War"got picked apart as if it were the movie itself rather than an advertisem*nt for it (a weirdregular occurrence in "film discourse," such as it is). But the actual movie turns out to bemore politically astute and plausible than early reactions said, even though it's likely that Garland's "you already know the story" approach (like the way the overall arc of theUS occupation of Vietnamwas depicted in "Full Metal Jacket") will seem to validate the gripes for the first hour.Yes,it's true,Texas votes Republican in national elections and California votes Democratic, but as of this writing,Northern California isincreasingly controlled by libertarian-influenced tech billionaires, andmuch of central and eastern California leans Republican and loathes CaliforniaDemocrats so much that they'veadvocated "divid(ing) parts of coastal California, including the Bay Area, from California to become an independent country." The president is referred to as a fascist. I’m not sure how literally we’re supposed to take that because both Trump and Biden have been called that by people who don’t like them.

But if you had to make a list of what "Civil War"is trying to do,"diagnosing what ails the United States of America"might not crack the Top 5. Yes, ifyou wanted to treat the movie soreductively, you could.But if youpay attention to what the movie is actually doing rather than cherry picking elements that validate whatever take you brought in with you, it won't be easy. I went into "CivilWar"with arms folded, expecting to hate it, because so many contemporaryfilms about US politics by foreign filmmakersseem to have cribbed their worldviewfrom New York Times editorials and badTweets.It upended my preconceived notions.

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As far as "future shock" goes,Garland, an Englishman,isn't cynically avoiding specifics or talking out of his behind. He's buryingthe text under subtext, in the name of creating a compelling but credible experience,until said text explodes through the screen via Jesse Plemons, who has a cameo as a soldier who might or might not be a WesternFront officer but is surely a parasite on the remnants of the body politic. This soft-voiced, smirky hellioninterrogatesthe terrified group of journalists(which consists of two white women, a native-born Black man, and aSouth American emigre, plus anAsian-American and a Chinese immigrantwho joined them on the road) with all the delicacy of Gene Hackman's racist white cop Popeye Doyle terrorizing Black people in "The French Connection" for kicks.

A terse line of dialogue reveals thatLee became famous for taking a prize-winning photo of something called the "Antifa massacre" when Jessie was very young."Antifa massacre"is initially tossed off in a way that makes you wonder if Garland is hoping progressives will assume it was anti-fascistswho were murdered by reactionaries, but reactionaries will assume it wasthe reverse. Thanks toPlemons' demonic showstopperand the thunderous, ultimately chillingfinale (set during theattempted coup in Washington) I think it's clear what happened. But your mileage will vary.

Nevertheless, these characters aren't constantly exposition-ingto each other and explaining the world to the viewerbecause that's not what people woulddo in real life, whether they were trying to survivemass extinctionin Gazaor Ukraine or endure amilitary dictatorshipin Argentina or Myanmar. Indeed, oneof the mostfascinating (or if you don't like it, perplexing)aspects of "Civil War" isthat it often playslike an artifact warped into our world fromsome future popular culture that has decided it's finallytime for a "big statement" movie in the vein of"Apocalypse Now" or "Full Metal Jacket," but for people who remember an American Civil War and have enough perspective to consider buying a ticket to a blockbuster about it.

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Garland is known as mainly a science fiction storyteller. Hewrote "28Days Later," "Sunshine" and"Dredd," adapted"Never Let Me Go" from Kazuo Ishiguro's novel, and wrote and directed "Ex Machina" and "Annihilation,"all of which had an intense and believable physicality on top of dealing in metaphors and visceral experiences. (He also did the gender essentialist horror flick"Men," which some people defend but that I consider his only failure.) "Civil War" isn't science fiction, exactly, nor could it be described mainly as "speculative fiction,"although it falls under that umbrella. The world-building is masterful. But the world-building isnot the movie.

I appreciated it as astory about journalists whose own country is cratering but who keep chasing the story and are determined to catch it even if it kills them. Would they have embedded themselves with Hitler's army if they'd somehow survived behind enemy lines in Germany in the 1940s and been given the opportunity? I wouldn't rule it out.They will probably come across as unlikable, or at least off-putting, to most viewers—the New York Times and other supposedly "neutral" mainstream outletshave come under fire in recent yearsfor seeming to give the rise of American fascism the "both sides" treatment, and when their reporters are called out, they often say that their onlyduty is to tell the story. Certain members of certainprofessions have that code. Other members disagree. Both factions are represented in "Civil War," but in a fictionalized context that asks "Is the storyteller's highest obligation to tell what happened or choose a side?" and then lets the audience fight over the answer. A case could be made that the title is not just about the civil war in the future US, but within contemporary journalism.

I've purposefully avoided describing a lot of the story in this review because Iwant people to go in cold, as I did, and experience the movie as sort of picaresque narrative consisting of set pieces that test the characters morally and ethically as well as physically, from one day and one moment to the next. Suffice to say that the final section brings every thematic element together in a perfectly horrifying fashion and ends with a moment of self-actualization I don't think I'll ever be able to shake.

This review was filed from the SXSW Film Festival. It opens on April 12th.

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Film Credits

Civil War movie review & film summary (2024) | Roger Ebert (9)

Civil War (2024)

Rated R

109 minutes

Cast

Kirsten Dunstas Ellie

Wagner Mouraas Joel

Cailee Spaenyas Jesse

Stephen McKinley Hendersonas Sammy

Jesse Plemons

Nick Offermanas President

Karl Glusman

Sonoya Mizuno

Jefferson White

Director

  • Alex Garland

Writer

  • Alex Garland

Original Music Composer

  • Geoff Barrow
  • Ben Salisbury

Director of Photography

  • Rob Hardy

Editor

  • Jake Roberts

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Civil War movie review & film summary (2024) | Roger Ebert (2024)

FAQs

What is the plot of the Civil War movie 2024? ›

Is Civil War 2024 worth watching? ›

As a piece of action cinema, Civil War is nearly flawless. But as a story, it falls short. Fresh score. It's too simplistic to call Civil War a polemic or a cautionary tale – it's a smorgasbord of food for thought, its urgent and incisive visual and thematic construction generating a bracing immediacy.

What is the message of the new movie Civil War? ›

The box office success of “Civil War” ensures, though, that more “American carnage” stories are likely headed our way. Though the film doesn't take any political sides, it amplifies the same message that autocrats in Russia and China are making through their propaganda: America is hopelessly divided and degenerate, and ...

What's the point of the movie Civil War? ›

It's more a call for reflection, an attempt to put us in the shoes of others, than a warning — not an It Can Happen Here movie, but a Here's What It's Like movie. It doesn't want to make us feel so much as it wants us to ask why we don't feel anything.

What happened at the end of Civil War movie? ›

In the movie's final moments, the two women tag along with a Western Forces squadron storming the White House, hoping to find the president. Lee dies protecting Jessie from gunfire, and Jessie goes on to take the final shots that Lee had wanted to, showing Western Forces soldiers killing the defenseless president.

What was the Civil War film about? ›

Is the new movie Civil War any good? ›

As I feared, Civil War is dangerously careless and unpleasant in its apolitical conceit. It's so bitterly obvious Garland's pitch was: "you know all those Middle East civil war journalists-go-there movies, I want to make that but set it in America" though it has nothing more to say anyway. War is bad!

Where was Civil War filmed in 2024? ›

The cast includes Kirsten Dunst, Wagner Moura, Cailee Spaeny, Stephen McKinley Henderson, Sonoya Mizuno and Nick Offerman. Principal photography began in Atlanta, Georgia, in 2022, with production moving to London later in the year.

How graphic is the Civil War movie? ›

A decent amount of blood is shown but nothing too graphic, but still very disturbing. A character is shot in the stomach while driving away from someone shooting. The impact is offscreen, but a lot of blood can be seen on their shirt.

What is the moral of the Civil War movie? ›

While Civil War director Alex Garland gives no explicit reason for the war, he says that the movie, in general, is about polarization and the extreme political rhetoric that's intended to make us believe the other side is evil. Once we believe the other side is evil, we can justify all sorts of measures.

What is the synopsis of the Civil War? ›

The American Civil War was fought between the United States of America and the Confederate States of America, a collection of eleven southern states that left the Union in 1860 and 1861. The conflict began primarily as a result of the long-standing disagreement over the institution of slavery.

What was the main point of Civil War? ›

A common explanation is that the Civil War was fought over the moral issue of slavery. In fact, it was the economics of slavery and political control of that system that was central to the conflict.

What is the plot of the Civil War 2024? ›

Fresh audience score. From filmmaker Alex Garland comes a journey across a dystopian future America, following a team of military-embedded journalists as they race against time to reach DC before rebel factions descend upon the White House.

What is the Civil War 2024 movie about? ›

Is Civil War based on a true story? ›

Not a look into the near future of our country. Whatever you have been led to believe about Civil War is simply not true. This film is exactly like any of its contemporaries. It follows a group of journalists traveling through a war-torn country, the only difference is in Civil War the setting is America.

What is the plot of A24 Civil War? ›

It follows a team of journalists traveling from New York City to Washington, D.C., during a civil war fought across the United States between an authoritarian federal government and several regional factions, to interview the President before rebels take the city.

What is the plot of Marvel Civil War? ›

Is the new movie Civil War good? ›

As I feared, Civil War is dangerously careless and unpleasant in its apolitical conceit. It's so bitterly obvious Garland's pitch was: "you know all those Middle East civil war journalists-go-there movies, I want to make that but set it in America" though it has nothing more to say anyway. War is bad!

What does Tony Stark want in Civil War? ›

Indeed, this was one of the main reasons why Iron Man was actually for the Sokovia Accords in Captain America: Civil War: he wanted to keep the Avengers operating in preparation for what was to come. Tony was never fully on board with relinquishing all control to the U.N.

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