Review: Civil War Is A Warning To America

Alex Garland’s latest film is a road trip through the ruins of America as the nation is engulfed in a modern day civil war. It wasn’t so long ago that such a scenario would be unthinkable. Now we wonder if it’s an inevitability.

There’s a moment in Civil War when Kirsten Dunst’s world-weary photojournalist sits down in the ruins of a US industrial park, with tracer fire lighting up the night a few miles away, and turns to Stephen McKinley’s print scribe.

“Every time I got the photo and survived a war zone,” Dunst’s character tells him, “I thought I was sending a warning home: don’t do this. And yet here we are.”

In a movie that works on every level as a warning to the American public not to throw away what we have, what we take for granted, that one quiet moment feels like director Alex Garland speaking directly to the audience, making sure no one can miss the point. Don’t do this.

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Dunst, left, and McKinley share a quiet moment in an industrial park as a battle rages a few miles off. Credit: A24

The sad truth is, the United States now seem more divided than at any other point since the original civil war. We’re dangerously close to the abyss, and the people dragging us there are the most ignorant of us. They’re the people who can’t tell you the name of their own congressman and can’t articulate what the three branches of government do (or even what they are), but insist everyone listen with rapt attention as they screech incoherently about politics and demonize those whose views differ.

They’re the people who return the zealots to congress, who populate the extremes and openly fantasize about purging the country of the ideologically impure.

Civil War: Dunst and Spaeny
Kirsten Dunst, left, and Cailee Spaeny in Civil War. Credit: A24

They’ve sworn fealty to ideology, abdicating their responsibility to think about things for themselves. Because, frankly, it’s easier to pick a pundit and an alignment, construct a filter bubble in which they never have to be confronted with a fact they don’t like, and be constantly reminded how they should feel about everything from petty culture war issues to conflicts happening a comfortable distance away. That way everything remains neatly in the abstract, and the consequences are someone else’s problem.

But not this time.

Civil War’s cast is phenomenal, but much of the film’s power comes from seeing the familiar become the horrific. Garland illustrates the banality of evil by taking his characters on a journey through the war-torn east coast, past shopping plazas cratered by rocket propelled grenades, waterways filled with bodies and playgrounds on fire. One highway overpass is vandalized with a spray-painted “Go Steelers!” while the bodies of two Americans sway on ropes beneath it.

Civil War: Go Steelers

In refugee camps in Pennsylvania and Virginia, people who could be our neighbors talk quietly around fires while their kids play with soccer balls and chase each other. The film’s main characters, a quartet of journalists trying to get to Washington, DC (where we’re told presidential loyalists shoot members of the press on the spot), marvel when they ride through one idyllic small town where people walk their dogs and hang out in coffee shops as if the country isn’t tearing itself apart.

It’s only when they stop to talk to the proprietor of a small shop that they realize the illusion of normalcy is maintained by an army of sharpshooters keeping watch from the rooftops.

Garland wisely stays away from the specific ideological reasons for the civil war in favor of showing us the fallout.

The president is on his third term. He’s authorized airstrikes on fellow Americans, imprisoned dissidents, put a bounty on journalists and hasn’t offered the public anything more than teleprompter-fed remarks in more than a year. But his authoritarian grip on power is finally fractured when two fed-up coalitions of states break away from the union. The more powerful of the two, the so-called WF (Western Forces), is extremely well-equipped: a shot of one of their camps shows F-35 Raptors, mechanized infantry and heavy lift helicopters.

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Dunst’s character in a Western Forces camp. Credit: A24

These aren’t people living on the margins of society, armed with civilian versions of AR-15s. They’re US military, entire divisions defected in opposition to Washington with all the firepower and logistics capacity that entails. Separately, another secessionist coalition led by Florida is making its way up the east coast, seeking to turn the Carolinas and other states to their cause.

The noose is tightening around the president’s neck, even as he insists “the greatest military campaign in American history” under his command has defeated the secessionists, like Baghdad Bob in the Oval Office.

Civil War: Nick Offerman
Nick Offerman plays the authoritarian, three-term president who has ordered airstrikes on American citizens and had journalists executed. Credit: A24

As the Western Forces and Florida Alliance push toward D.C., there’s a renewed sense of urgency in symbolism. The president, Wagner Moura’s Joel says early in the movie, will be “dead inside a month.” Both coalitions are intent on reaching Washington and ending the war on July 4th.

“The optics,” Joel tells the other journalists, “are irresistible.”

Thus, the reporters decide to go after “the only story left,” which is to attempt to interview and photograph the president before he’s deposed or killed, despite the very real possibility they’ll be executed on the White House lawn before they can ask a question.

The film’s central characters are Dunst’s Lee Smith, a celebrated photojournalist who has seen it all, Moura’s Joel, the reporter who is partnered with Lee, McKinley’s Sammy, a reporter for “what’s left of the New York Times,” and Cailee Spaeny’s Jessie, a green but fearless 23-year-old who wants to be a war photographer like Lee.

Lee and Jessie meet at the beginning of the film in Manhattan, where both are photographing unrest as people crowd a disaster relief tanker, hoping to fill their containers with water. The fact that one of life’s most essential needs is no longer guaranteed, in New York City of all places, is just the first sign of how bad things have gotten.

Jessie moves in, snapping away as the crowd pushes toward the tanker and NYPD officers try to maintain order. When several people rush the tanker, Jessie gets hit in the face by someone swinging a bat.

Reeling, she stumbles away from the crowd, and Lee immediately mothers her, taking the young woman a safe distance away. She takes off her bright yellow press jacket and gives it to Jessie, then tells her: “If I see you again, you’d better be wearing Kevlar and a helmet.”

Civil War: Cailee Spaeny and Kirsten Dunst
Spaeny, left, and Dunst. Credit: A24

They do meet again, the next morning. Lee is surprised to see the younger woman in the back seat of their truck next to Sammy. Furious, she pulls Joel aside. He explains that Jessie had approached him late the previous evening, asking to tag along with him, Lee and Sammy on their trip to DC.

Joel argues that Lee was Jessie’s age when she began her career, but he’s not acting out of the kindness of his heart. He is a man, Jessie is a beautiful young woman, and he has ulterior motives.

Lee’s mouth twitches in disapproval. She sees this fresh-faced, naive 23-year-old, and sees herself before she’s become jaded from a career of documenting humans doing horrific things to each other.

Civil War would be a road trip movie, if road trip movies illustrated camaraderie by shared trauma. Pockets of violence are everywhere. Some involve presidential loyalists fending off advance elements of the Western Forces, but some are civilians who see an opportunity to kill, torture and pillage with impunity.

Dunst is magnificent as Lee, wearing the war photographer’s trauma like armor, her disgust with humanity apparent in her tired eyes. McKinley is the old-school print scribe who can’t quit, even as his body fails him.

“You’re worried I’m too old and too slow,” he tells Lee and Joel early in the film as they drink in the lounge of a Manhattan hotel, imploring them to let him accompany them south to D.C.

“You aren’t?” Lee answers.

“Of course I am,” he admits. “But are you really going to make me explain why I have to do this?”

Civil War: Wagner Moura
Wagner Moura’s Joel screams in frustration and rage after a particularly traumatic scene. Credit: A24

Here again, so much of the movie’s power is showing America in a state we only see from a distance through the dispatches and footage of war reporters. As the three of them sip their drinks in the hotel bar, waiting for their stories and photos to transmit over glacial wifi, the power drops.

“That’s every night this week,” Lee sighs.

“They’ll switch to the generators,” Sammy says.

They’re not in the shell of a formerly grand hotel in Baghdad or Damascus, relying on juice from old car batteries. They’re in New York, America’s greatest city, the cultural, media and finance capital of the world, a metropolis that operates on 11 billion watt-hours a day. A devastated, eerily quiet New York which resembles the early days of the COVID lockdown, yes, but New York all the same.

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A sniper is pinned down by a civilian who has taken advantage of the lawlessness and chaos to kill fellow Americans. Credit: A24

After watching Civil War, I was disheartened to see the usual rage and incrimination in discussions about the film. Depending on their political backgrounds, people are sure Garland — a native and citizen of the UK — is “a lib” or “a MAGAtard.” Opportunities for thoughtful discussion are derailed in favor of the usual talking point regurgitation.

But the hope is that the sensible are the silent majority, that we aren’t so fattened by domestic stability, security and a feeling of invincibility that we can’t see what’s right in front of our faces. We would do well to remind ourselves that the scenarios we experience only in the safety of fiction still happen all over the world.

As you read this, people are dying of exhaustion and suffering pointless deaths in North Korean and Russian hard labor camps so brutal that we don’t even have a way to place them in context. The people of Haiti are terrorized nightly by ultra-violent gangs who have filled the power vacuum, raping and executing with impunity. Gaza has been bombed to rubble, and its rubble has been bombed to sand. People hoping to escape abject poverty embark on the hard journey to America only to find themselves sold into sexual slavery. Men and women in Asia, desperate to find jobs, arrive at what they think are interviews only to be kidnapped and spirited away into compounds in lawless Myanmar, where they’re forced to sit in front of screens for 20 hours a day running “pig butchering” romance scams on lonely American retirees. If they try to flee, they’re shot.

And just yesterday, a man walked up to a golf course in Palm Beach county, pointed the muzzle of an AK-47 through the chain link fence and tried to assassinate a major party American presidential candidate — the second assassination attempt in three months.

The people who most need to hear Garland’s message are those least likely to heed it, but we can hope. Reality has a funny way of obliterating fantasy, and it’s better for all of us if our delusional countrymen don’t find out the hard way that war is neither fun nor glorious.

Let’s hope Civil War remains a movie, and not a prescient preview of things to come.

Civil War is currently streaming on HBO Max and is available to rent via Apple, Amazon and other online streaming platforms.

Header image: Western Forces units fire rocket propelled grenades at White House loyalists using the Lincoln Memorial for cover. Credit: A24

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14 thoughts on “Review: Civil War Is A Warning To America”

  1. I want to believe that Covid-19 will be the worst thing to hit this country in recent years. But maybe it won’t. Makes one despair of one’s “fellow” man, huh?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Most people in this country lose their minds over minor inconveniences like their flight sitting on the tarmac for an extra 20 minutes. If they think a civil war is romantic, they really haven’t thought about what happens when logistics chains are destroyed and grocery stores are empty, prescription drugs are unattainable and networks go dark permanently as infrastructure is obliterated.

      The Ukrainians have spent the last two winters without reliable heat, but we wouldn’t make it one July without AC.

      Liked by 2 people

  2. The Capital will have all law enforcement, miltary, etc. in Nov. Who do you think will end up in body bags this time? Them or traitors?

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    1. It wouldn’t happen in November anyway, the count is likely going to go on until the next day at least after the shit festival last time. Observers in every precinct, audits of machines, all that.

      Amazing how countries like the UK can call an election in a month and have everything counted, but we have 2/4 years between cycles and it takes us ages.

      Liked by 2 people

      1. Yes. I know not just November or just Capital. My client the FBI agent goes all over the U.S. Left about a year ago. He does not have to tell me why. Happened to be in New Jersey last few days. Him being Jewish was disgusted at Timothy Hale- Businelli in invited by the devil. He looks like Hitler!! And all this bs that the devil does not know who that pos Businelli is. My cousins, retired FDNY,who went to 9/11 wanted to spit in Loomers face and that devil if they ever came near them. Of course, they would not. They would of turned thier backs.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Correction on one thing. My client said law enforcement has been near Capital months ago. They never anyway. Vermin Patriot Front have been there for months. Google the garbage. They came to my neighborhood twice. Guess what they put on synagogues and telephone polls?

        Liked by 1 person

      3. They’re there year round now, and there are plainclothes officers and agents hanging out around all the major government buildings, including the White House, the Capitol, the Senate Office Building, the Supreme Court, etc.

        I think that’s a good thing. I don’t think there’ll be a repeat of Jan. 6, but there are crazy people out there as we just saw this weekend, and people who hate the US and would inflict harm just to destabilize the country.

        Liked by 1 person

  3. Civil war is exactly what the oligarchs hope that we will do. They will pit one “side” of the American people against the other while they sell arms to both sides and laugh all the way to the bank.

    Don’t do it, fellow Americans. We are your neighbors, not your enemies.

    Don’t get fooled. It’s not “left vs right,” it’s the oligarchs vs the rest of us.

    Liked by 3 people

  4. “”The United States now seem more divided than at any other point since the original civil war”. And in the UK, too. I’m approaching 70 and have never been more depressed about the state of our country. We too are a nation divided, and I fear it will get much worse.

    There’s a saying that runs “When America Sneezes, the World Catches Cold.” We will therefore be anxiously watching what happens across the Pond over the next few months. Where the US goes, the UK will probably follow.

    Liked by 3 people

    1. I don’t feel like I know enough about the situation in the UK to say much. Mostly I just write about Larry the Cat, laugh at the antics of guys like Jacob Reese-Mogg (did you know Sasha Baron Cohen interviewed him some 25 years ago before Reese-Mogg or anyone else knew who Cohen was?), and read about the hot button issues.

      You’re right. In many ways I feel like the US and the UK are one big overarching culture: Your movie stars and celebrated musicians are our movie stars and celebrated musicians, and vice versa. Same for artists, public intellectuals and comedians like Ricky Gervais and the late, great Christopher Hitchens (I miss that man dearly), well known chefs, journalists, novelists.

      It was distressing to see the news reports about the unrest in the UK, especially since that whole thing was sparked by misinformation. Or maybe disinformation. It’s difficult to tell if the Russians are masterminds at manipulating public outrage in the west or if the media and politicians just blame them as a convenient boogieman. Certainly they’d need to be a lot more competent at that than they are at military tactics and diplomacy.

      That whole episode reminded me of the Covington Catholic incident in D.C., where someone packaged events on social media to look a certain way, omitting just enough key details to bait people into going ballistic.

      Liked by 3 people

    2. That goes for Italy. The far right trash that celebrates Mussolinis birthday and salutes him. Happy my parents are no longer living. My cousins in Italy are disgusted and they are saying WTF with Nazis being invited by that devil to fundraisers. dinners, etc. in America.

      Liked by 2 people

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