Last Men in Aleppo
was nominated for Best Documentary Feature at the Academy Awards this year
(lost to Icarus). The film is about
the White Helmets, a group of men in Syria who scour the city searching for
survivors after homes and buildings have been bombed. Unfortunately, they must
also deal with fatalities, often of children and babies. The film was written
and directed by Feras Fayyad of Syria, and co-directed by film editor Steen
Johannessen of Denmark.
In 2017, a short film about this group of volunteer rescue
workers called The White Helmets won
an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Subject. This recent award for a
film about the group possibly contributed to why the feature film Last Men in Aleppo did not win this
year. (Plus Icarus was an excellent
film and deserved to win.)
Syria has been at war for over five years now, and the brave
men searching for victims in the rubble at times despair of the West coming to
help them. They face death and destruction by rebel shelling, and by Russian
warplanes dropping bombs.
The motto of the Syria Civil Defense (White Helmets) is, “To
save a life is to save all of humanity.” I don’t usually become political in my
posts, but in this case I am going to provide a link to a website that will
give you more information about the plight of the people in Syria. Here it is: Syria Civil Defense
I would be surprised if anyone could watch this film and not
be deeply affected by seeing the death and fear on screen that these innocent
victims live with on a daily basis. Humanitarian aide should not be dictated by
politics or religion, but be given because we are all human. The White Helmets
are unarmed and neutral and don’t see a difference between people. What some
may label as an enemy is still a soul worth saving.
There is no sparing the viewer of Last Men in Aleppo of the death and injury sustained to civilians
as their city is bombed. The men who seek to save them are relentless in
removing rubble from the crumbling buildings to find even one survivor, while
others choose to leave Syria, fleeing a war zone that grows more dangerous by
the day.
Last Men in Aleppo
won the World Documentary Grand Jury Prize at the 2017 Sundance Film Festival.
The film is not rated. I watched it on Netflix. The film is really a historical
document, like news coverage you might see on a quality news station, only
longer. It’s mainly about the search and rescues, even though we see and hear
the bombs going off and dropping throughout the city. It also shows the
admiration the people have for the White Helmets, and their own struggle to
survive in a city where resources are scarce.
I really don’t have anything else to add to my review here.
The film’s images speak for the people of Syria.