Inaccuracies In Love And War

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Based on Hemingway’s experiences in World War One, In Love and War almost perfectly captures reality in its portrayal of the way the author lived and loved in Milan, Italy. While there are a few inaccuracies, the film has been widely praised for its solid basis in fact.
In Love and War, the main conflict comes from Ernest Hemingway’s injury and the whirlwind romance that follows his admittance to a hospital in Milan. This conflict wasn’t constructed for dramatic effect; indeed, most of it is actually quite factual. On July 8, 1918, Hemingway, a volunteer for the Red Cross, was hit by a mortar shell while handing out chocolate bars in an Italian trench (“Ernest Hemingway wounded on the Italian front”). From there, he was admitted to a hospital where he fell in love with a reluctant nurse named Agnes von Kurowsky despite her doing nothing to encourage the “kid” (as she called him) (“Agnes von Kurowsky to Ernest Hemingway”). After recovering, Hemingway moved back to the United States, where he continued to write to Agnes, until she …show more content…

For example, while Agnes later insisted that “she merely ‘liked’ him (Hemingway) and that their relationship was nothing more than a ‘flirtation’” (“Agnes von Kurowsky to Ernest Hemingway”), the movie shows an intense love scene between the two before Hemingway was shipped back to America although there is no proof that such an event ever took place (Diliberto). On the same subject, Agnes never again saw Hemingway after he left Milan; the scene where she crawls back to him is entirely fictional (Diliberto). Additionally, Agnes never fell in love with the Italian doctor Domenico Caracciolo because Caracciolo was an Italian officer, not a doctor (Donaldson). So, while the main conflict in In Love and War was accurate, the circumstances around it were

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