Spike Lee has been fighting World War II long before the release of his latest film, Miracle at St. Anna. His campaign began with a salvo at Clint Eastwood for excluding black faces from Flags of Our Fathers and perpetuating the assumption that blacks contributed little to the U.S. victory. It was not the movie Eastwood wanted to make and the sniping between the two directors probably served to harden Lee's resolve.
Miracle at St. Anna is about African-American bravery on the front lines of the Italian theater. It's also a platoon picture about conflict within the ranks and the dense fog of war draped over any armed conflict. The war movie at the heart of Miracle at St. Anna is folded inside a murder mystery, a why-dun-it with the snappy dialogue and propulsive momentum of film noir.
With only a few missteps, Lee shows his command of the cinematic medium and his eye for many of its genres. The opening scene, introducing us to Miracle's protagonist, Hector (Laz Alonso), is bravado filmmaking in terms of editing and cinematography. The camera zooms down a dingy Harlem hallway, pausing at an apartment door. Cut inside: Hector is watching the John Wayne war movie TheLongest Day on TV, more bitterly than fondly. Behind his head hangs a World War II propaganda poster exhorting African-Americans to fight "because we're on God's side." Hector is actually Puerto Rican, but his dark complexion consigned him to the 92nd Infantry Division, a black unit under white officers.
"We fought for this country, too," Hector utters angrily, stating the point Lee wants to make. Fortunately, the director's artistry is usually broader than his punditry. He takes a forceful stand to be sure, but as in his best previous films, the fullness of life overtakes his temptation toward message mongering, making his point resonate louder and longer.
A stoic seeming man who buttons up his feelings, Hector works behind the counter of a post office. One day his eyes narrow slightly in recognition of the man purchasing stamps. Calmly, Hector reaches for the useful World War II souvenir he keeps under his jacket, his Lugar, and shoots the customer dead.
The reason for his murderous outburst becomes clear after the lengthy flashback that occupies most of the film and follows Hector's squad as it becomes stranded behind German lines in Tuscany-the result of racist officers at headquarters willing to squander the lives of the "waiters and shoeshine boys" of the 92nd Division. Like the all-white squads of classic Hollywood World War II movies, Hector's detail encompasses a range of personalities. Staff Sgt. Stamps (Derek Luke) believes the promise of America will finally be fulfilled for his people if they prove valorous in combat. Bishop (Michael Ealy) hates all white men and thinks rapprochement between the races is impossible. Train (Omar Benson Miller) is a big-hearted giant filled with the rapturous spirit of black Southern Protestantism. Hector, a Roman Catholic wearing a rosary under his fatigues, keeps his own counsel. He acts as go-between with the Italian villagers, whose families are divided between Fascists who hate the Nazis and partisans dealing with the Germans on the side and everyday folk keeping their heads down.
Along the way Train adopts an Italian orphan boy who appears touched by grace and claims the head from a Renaissance statue, treating it as an amulet of good luck. An aura of magic realism, prevalent in some recent Italian films on the war years, is visible in spots. In other scenes the gritty, to-the-throat dynamism of American war director Sam Fuller is more evident. War is never a pretty sight and brings out the worst and the best. The African-American characters aren't all paragons and the Germans include everyone from men of conscience to demons in the guise of men.
Somehow Lee manages to keep the film's divergent tones and genres from clashing. If Miracle at St. Anna has a fault, it's in trying to accomplish a couple too many things within the scope of a single movie. But what Lee does well is remarkable, drawing richness from the story's source in James McBride's novel, and maybe almost miraculous, given the impoverished standards of contemporary Hollywood.