Partly an antiwar film
reflecting the counterculture perspective and partly a squaresville
pro-military picture promulgating Greatest Generation attitudes, the misshapen
comedy/drama Suppose They Gave a War and
Nobody Came? depicts an explosive conflict between the soldiers occupying a
U.S. Army base and the citizens of the hick town neighboring the base. The
movie features myriad subplots and several principal characters, so for about
the first hour of the film’s running time, it’s hard to tell who or what the
story is about. Once things come into focus—or at least as much so as they ever
do, which is not a lot—the sum is less than the parts. Suppose They Gave a War and Nobody Came? includes some amusing performances,
as well as fine production values and fleeting passages of snappy dialogue, but
the script is simultaneously overpopulated and underdeveloped. Interesting
ideas fade into the ether, silly tropes rise to the fore, and it all congeals
into a kind of cinematic sludge.
The basic gist is that a career soldier named
Officer Michael Nace (Brian Keith) gets tasked with handling community
relations between the base and the town. That’s easier said than done, because
troublemaking Army personnel including drunken womanizer Sergeant Shannon
Gambroni (Tony Curtis) have made enemies of the town’s sadistic top cop,
Sheriff Harve (Ernest Borgnine). As the film progresses, tensions between
citizens and soldiers grow worse and worse, eventually inspiring Mace to lead
an armed assault on the town. The town fights back not just with police but
also with a private militia funded and overseen by megalomaniacal idiot Billy
Joe Davis (Tom Ewell).
This short synopsis excludes easily half of the film’s
narrative threads, because characters played by Don Ameche, Bradford Dillman,
Ivan Dixon, and Suzanne Pleshette—among others—also have significant amounts of
screen time. Suppose They Gave a War and
Nobody Came? is such a mess that it’s not worth expressing frustration that
certain elements almost work. Borgnine adds another scenery-chewing monster to
his gallery of screen villains, and Keith is entertainingly grumpy, but their
efforts are stymied by the general formlessness. As Borgnine says in his autobiography,
“We had a lot of fun doing it and I got a paycheck, even though it turned out
terrible.”
Suppose They Gave a War and Nobody Came?: FUNKY
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