Trying to make sense of a conflict that most Westerners would rather put out of their
minds isn't really Welcome to Sarajevo's chief concern (although that may be the
feeling you get going in). Instead, director Winterbottom takes an accusatory stance
against not only the plight of the many victims of the Muslim, Serbian, and Croatian
civil war in former Yugoslavia, but also against the politics of the West that allowed
the bloodshed to continue across the better part of the first half of this decade.
For all the U.N.'s blue helmets and John Major's endless speechifying, the war and
its simultaneous "ethnic cleansing" was, for most of the world, second-page news
at best. Loosely based on the memoir Natasha's Story by British journalist Michael
Nicholson, Welcome to Sarajevo tells the story of the war correspondents sent to
cover the siege of Sarajevo in 1993. There's Michael Henderson (Dillane), the gruff
Brit who finds himself drawn to the plight of nine-year-old war orphan Emira (Nusevic);
gonzo American Flynn (Harrelson), who courageously risks a sniper's bullet to aid
a fallen victim, then makes damn sure the footage makes it into his newscast; Nina
(Tomei), the American relief worker eager to cut any deal to airlift the orphans
to safety in Italy; and Risto (Visnjic), the Yugoslav driver and aide de camp who
fills in after his predecessor is killed. Tomei looks far too fresh-scrubbed to be
anywhere near a bloody, messy hell like this, but the rest of the cast is grimly
realistic, particularly Harrelson, who manages to bring some goofball credibility
to what is essentially a very small role. Throughout the scenes of carnage (of which
there are many - Winterbottom weaves real atrocity footage amongst his staged recreations,
and the effect is chilling and very gory), the main story emerges, that of Henderson's
attempts to smuggle the young Emira to safety in Britain. Welcome to Sarajevo also
brings up some hard questions about the sheer impossibility of foreign corespondents
remaining true to their journalistic neutrality in a war zone. If, like Harrelson's
character, a journalist risks his life to save a sniper's victim, isn't he by that
very act of compassion abandoning his credo of impartiality? It's a tough question,
and one that is a source of endless debate amongst the correspondents who cover war
zones. At times, Winterbottom veers into pedantic, visual screeds, editing in footage
of ineffectual Western leaders against shots of dead children and mangled families.
That aside, he's crafted a harrowing glimpse inside this conflict that, at the time,
no one much seemed to care about, and that in itself is worth some attention.
3.0 stars
--Marc Savlov
Interviews
Welcome to Sarajevo 
Welcome to Sarajevo 
Full Length Reviews
Welcome to Sarajevo 
Welcome to Sarajevo 
Other Films by Michael Winterbottom
Jude 
Film Vault Suggested Links
Les Miserables 
Richard III 
Seven Years in Tibet 
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