Review of Report from the Aleutians (1943) by Grant S — 07 May 2018
A dull, dry, even annoying telling of what should have been an interesting story.
John Huston's WW2 documentary on the Aleutians campaign.
I was intrigued by this documentary as the Aleutians campaign is not covered much in history books or documentaries. Directed by the great John Huston, with some rare footage, what can go wrong?
Well, actually, a lot. The biggest problem is that John Huston decided to narrate the movie himself. His delivery is incredibly off-putting: flowery, bombastic, verbose and all about style rather than substance. Yes, it was a propaganda film, so a bit of salesmanship was required, but a bit more subtlety would have helped the message go down.
The content itself, while showing the daily operations on the US forces in the Aleutians, especially the USAAF, well, doesn't have much of the bigger picture. All we know is the US are on one island, Adak, and the Japanese are on another, Kiska, and the Americans are bombing Kiska on a regular basis. (Don't get me started on how many times Huston says "Kiska"! I grew sick of the word quite quickly). That's it.
Quite disappointing.
This review of Report from the Aleutians (1943) was written by Grant S on 07 May 2018.
Report from the Aleutians has generally received mixed reviews.
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