Plot
The wife of a photojournalist sets out to discover why he came home from a recent assignment without his colleague.
Release Year: 2009
Rating: 6.5/10 (4,802 voted)
Director:
Danis Tanovic
Stars: Colin Farrell, Jamie Sives, Paz Vega
Storyline Mark and David are best friends, photo journalists going from war to war. In the spring of 1988, they're in Kurdistan, at an isolated mountain clinic, waiting for an offensive. David's had enough - he wants to go home to Dublin to his pregnant wife. He leaves, with Mark promising to follow in a few days. A week or so later, Mark's home after being wounded, but David's not been heard from. Mark's slow recovery and uncharacteristic behavior alarm his girlfriend, Elena, who asks her grandfather, a Spanish psychologist, to come to Dublin to help. Are there things the carefree and detached journalist is bottling up? Is he a casualty of war?
Writers: Danis Tanovic, Scott Anderson
Cast: Colin Farrell
-
Mark Walsh
Jamie Sives
-
David
Paz Vega
-
Elena Morales
Kelly Reilly
-
Diane
Branko Djuric
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Dr. Talzani
Mozaffar Shafeie
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Talzani's Assitant
Kae Bahar
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Wounded Man
(as Karzan Sherabayani)
Luis Callejo
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Pesh Merga Commander
Alex Spijksma
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Pesh Merga Sergeant
(as Alejandro Sánchez)
Ian McElhinney
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Ivan
Juliet Stevenson
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Amy
Michelle Hartman
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Nurse
Eileen Walsh
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Dr. Christopher
Nick Dunning
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Dr. Hersbach
Christopher Lee
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Joaquín Morales
Filming Locations: Alicante, Alicante, Comunidad Valenciana, Spain
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Canada:
(Toronto International Film Festival)
Did You Know?
Trivia:
In the film, Joaquin asks Mark his age, to which Mark replies he is 34. Colin Farrell was in fact 33 when making the film. Joaquin later admits in the film that he is 86, which was the age Christopher Lee was at the time of filming.
Quotes: Joaquín Morales:
I like to think of myself as a scholar of the human spirit.
User Review
The Numbing. Destructive Silences of War Experience
Rating: 8/10
TRIAGE is a well chosen title for this film about who survives an who
dies in war: at times those triage decisions are made by serendipity
(read 'bad luck'), at times they are made by physicians or medics
tending the wounded on the battlefield, and at times they are submerged
in the apparent 'survivors' only to later crush the life from those who
make it home. Writer/Director Danis Tanovic has adapted Scott
Anderson's novel is a manner that carries the seemingly simple act of
'triage' throughout the film, showing how that action can affect the
lives of friends, family, and psychological wholeness of the victim.
Mark Walsh (Colin Farrell, in yet another powerful role) and his buddy
David (Jamie Sives) are war photographers for a newspaper edited by Amy
(Juliet Stevenson). Their current assignment is Kurdistan and the
terrifying realities they not only experience but also commit to film
are of such a horrid nature that they both are in shock: they not only
witness killings and landmine explosion deaths, but they also watch one
Dr. Talani (Branko Djuric) triage the wounded, deciding who can survive
care and who is so near death that they are put aside to be later
'executed' by Dr. Talani in a compassionate gesture to end their futile
suffering. The tension is so great that David decides to return home,
leaving Mark to carry on the assignment. An explosion occurs and Mark
is seriously injured but survives and after being tended by Dr. Talani
he is encouraged to return home. There is no news as to where David is.
Mark returns home to his adoring Elena (Paz Vega), presents his
photographs to Amy, and begins to heal: David's wife Diane (Kelly
Reilly) is due to deliver their first child in two weeks and has had no
word from David. We watch as Mark, eroded by his experiences in
Kurdistan, retreat into a state of decline. Elena grows fearful as
Mark, despite hospitalizations and medical care, continues to
deteriorate and out of desperation she calls her grandfather Joaquin, a
psychiatrist who treated the victims of the Spanish Civil War (Elena is
still angry that her own grandfather treated the perpetrators of the
destruction that war caused). Joaquin slowly brings Mark into the
acceptance of how his mind has triaged the events in Kurdistan and
leads Mark to discover the truths about incidents in what war for which
he has blamed himself. We finally understand David's disappearance at
the moment when his and Diane's child is born.
This is a tough story to watch: subtitles would help the audience
understand the many dialects used in the film. But the message is clear
and the acting is superb by every member of the cast, even very small
but cogent cameos by Reece Ritchie as a boy in Beirut and Dada Ashi as
a Ugandan woman - two of the early incidents Mark must remember and
face in his work with Joaquin. The cinematography is dazzling,
especially the use of flashbacks of a raging river so important in
Mark's memory recall, and the constant focus on the blue and yellow
tags that mark the triage decisions. This is another powerful anti-war
film, this time as seen through the eyes of a non-combatant observer.
It is important to see.
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