Tag Archive: rats


BIRDSONG: LOVE AND SLAUGHTER

BIRDSONG directed by Philip Martin (BBC Television drama, 2012)

Clémence Poésy (Isabelle) and Eddie Redmayne (Stephen)

The last WWI veteran Harry Patch wrote the following in his memoir, The Last Post:
“We were soon back in the trenches …..our living conditions there were lousy, dirty and unsanitary….. there were rats as big as cats, and if you had any leather equipment the damn things would gnaw at it. We had leather equipment – and they’d chew it. If you stood still long enough they’d chew your boot laces”.

How can you hope to capture such horrors of warfare for TV or cinema and still make it watchable?  The answer is that  you can’t. The most you can do is suggest the kind of atrocities the soldiers had to endure and leave the rest to your imagination.

Nevertheless the lack of a single rat in this otherwise impressive three-hour BBC adaptation of Sebastian Faulks’ much-loved novel set during WWI is suspicious.  It may be reasonable to eliminate such ugly details but there is no doubt  that what remains is a sanitized version of reality. Continue reading

Werner Herzog’s Nosferatu the Vampyre  is essentially a homage to  F.W Mumau’s 1922 classic of  expressionist cinema – Nosferatu: Phantom der Nacht (“Nosferatu: Phantom of the Night”).

Visually it is spectacular and music from Popol Vuh and Wagner and the presence of a few hundred rats help to create a creepy atmosphere. Herzog’s intention was to recreate the scary  strangeness of the original but what he ended up making was one of the most unintentionally hilarious horror movies of all time.

When I first saw it in 1979, I came out of the cinema aching from having laughed so much.

Watching it again on DVD wasn’t quite as funny but there are still plenty of reasons why it is impossible to take seriously.

For example, when estate agent Jonathan Harker (Bruno Ganz)  arrives in Transylvania, he takes refreshment at a local inn. He announces his intention to visit Count Dracula’s castle whereupon the waitress drops a bottle of wine and all the clientele stop talking and stare in horror. The owner of the inn says, somewhat superfluously, that he would advise against this trip! Continue reading