Analysis Of Peter Weir's 'Galllipoli'

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Peter Weir 's Gallipoli is a tale of World War I and the Aussie involvement that portrays an account based on true events. Frank and Archy are brought to deliver a story of bravery that is fueled with the naivety of propaganda and ignorance. Weir gives us a deep tale of the hearts of the people and soldiers during the time of war. However, a series of grand realizations makes it apparent that Frank and Archy have been forcibly ripped from their youth in an endeavor that was doomed from the start. A duo who was fated for trouble from the start, Frank and Archy nearly spat in rejection to each others opinions: Archy wanted to be brave and a heroic figure that did something worthwhile for his country, and Frank just wanted to live his life unconcerned, …show more content…

"Those and other places have given us stories to be proud of" (Les Carolyn). The two boys believed this was where they would get their time to shine. Things like escaping fire while swimming nude underwater made things seem like a fairy-tale war drawn out with a blueprint. "Australia was born as a nation on April 25," says Bill Sellars, a Gallipoli-based Australian journalist, describing the day that the recently independent country mourned the loss of young soldiers on a distant battlefield (Hammer, Joshua). The depiction sounds more like an ailment for the country rather than a celebration of glory. Tragic. It is the most logically accurate, yet heartfelt description of the mind blowing turn of events at Gallipolli. The infantry experiences a battle that awakens them to the epiphany of the real time of war, and raises the notion that there are lives at stake. Comrades are dead. Some are mortally wounded and are barely hanging onto life. A soldier confides in Frank and asks him to send his diary back home. Frank is flabbergasted and seems to be at an emotional loss for words. It now shows the grim reality of this thing called war, that is no boyish yearn for glory, but a rather mature permanent changing of

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