25 April (film) explained

25 April
Director:Leanne Pooley
Runtime:85 minutes
Country:New Zealand
Language:English

25 April is a 2015 New Zealand animated documentary film about the 1915 Gallipoli Campaign directed by Leanne Pooley.[1] It was screened in the Contemporary World Cinema section of the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival.[2]

Reception

The film received mostly positive reviews. In New Zealand, Newshub's Tony Wright gave it four-and-a-half stars and described it as "startlingly original", praising the use of animation to depict the "depravity" of war.[3] The New Zealand Herald's Peter Calder similarly called it "evocative and moving", adding that the recreation of first-hand accounts of soldiers and a nurse "knit together to provide a comprehensive account of the doomed eight-month campaign to take the peninsula whose name resounds through our national myth."[4]

Graeme Tuckett, of Stuff.co.nz, gave 25 April a negative review with two-and-a-half stars. He wrote that it lacked "any sort of context or overview", failed to focus on any Ottoman soldiers and was "unoriginal". He compared it unfavorably with Tolga Ornek's Gallipoli (2005).[5]

Tom Peters and Sam Price of the World Socialist Web Site wrote that the documentary had some "moving portrayals" but criticized it for not opposing the First World War itself, instead taking a "national-isolationist" position. They also noted the film-makers' "almost exclusive focus on what the New Zealand and Australian forces endured" and failure to "convey the enormity of the Ottoman Empire's casualties."[6]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Production Commences on 25 April . 19 August 2015 . NZ Film.
  2. Web site: Sandra Bullock's 'Our Brand Is Crisis,' Robert Redford's 'Truth' to Premiere at Toronto . 18 August 2015 . Variety. 18 August 2015 .
  3. News: 25 April review. Wright. Tony. Newshub . 28 April 2016. 29 August 2016.
  4. News: Movie review: 25 April a graphic reminder. Calder. Peter. 23 April 2016. New Zealand Herald. en-NZ. 1170-0777. 29 August 2016.
  5. Web site: Animated Gallipoli tale lacks depth. Stuff. 27 April 2016 . 29 August 2016.
  6. Web site: 25 April: Animated documentary on New Zealand's role in the Gallipoli invasion. 25 June 2016. World Socialist Web Site. 29 August 2016.