

I expected a World War 2 film with an ensemble cast of queer characters and a woman who had an abortion to have a much higher body count. What obviously helped here was the surprising lack of dead gay characters. But for all of them, there is potential that tomorrow will be better and that there is still a chance to heal and be happy.


All of them end the film with a future unknown and different than what they thought at the start. Likewise, the characters in 1947 have not recovered from the events of their recent past and are unable to live fully and happily in the present because of this.ĭespite this, the film ends on a message of hope for most of its characters. The film is never so blatant as to have characters talk about it, but everything from a loaded silence, a tense music score, a woman crying in the background or the bleak, grey colour palette of 1947 really helps create a tone of shell shock and a country not quite recovered. Both of an individual level and on a national level, the film is a harrowing portrait of how World War 2 traumatized an entire nation. One thing the film also excels at is its depiction of trauma. The Night Watch brilliantly depicts it as something often simple but incredibly necessary. Human connection is the focus of the film. The film is really good at having interpersonal struggles like romance feel important and interesting even in the setting of the much larger problem of World War 2. As the story progresses, I wanted to learn more and more about the characters and hoped nothing too bad would happen to them. What additionally helps is that The Night Watch sketches interesting and sympathetic characters. So from the first to last minute of the film, I was engaged. It reveals information at a steady pace while introducing new factors. The Night Watch keeps the intrigue going. And then, and here’s the important thing, the rest of the movie pays off what it built up in the first act. During the first act in 1947, characters talk around issues that happened to them during the war.

This non-linear story is used to excellent effect. It starts out in 1947 and then flashes back to 1944 and then again to 1941 before a final scene in 1947. The film utilizes time really successfully. He’s surprised to find Duncan living with one of the elderly prison guards. Duncan is gay and spent most of the war in prison. Viv is engaged to a man who she engaged in an affair with during the war despite him being married. The other lead characters are adult siblings, Viv and Duncan. It’s good to know even in the 1940’s, lesbian social circles were still complex, messy webs of exes. The lesbian characters are Julia, Helen and Kay. The Night Watch focuses on a group of characters during and after World War 2 in London.
