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Testament of Youth (film)

Testament of Youth
Testament of Youth (film) POSTER.jpg
UK theatrical release poster
Directed by James Kent
Produced by
Written by Juliette Towhidi
Based on Testament of Youth
by Vera Brittain
Starring
Music by Max Richter
Cinematography Rob Hardy
Edited by Lucia Zucchetti
Production
company
Distributed by Lionsgate
Release date
  • 14 October 2014 (2014-10-14) (BFI)
  • 16 January 2015 (2015-01-16)
Running time
129 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Budget $10 million
Box office $5.3 million

Testament of Youth is a 2014 British drama film based on the First World War memoir of the same name written by Vera Brittain. The film stars Alicia Vikander as Vera Brittain, an independent young woman who abandoned her Oxford studies to become a war nurse. The film was directed by James Kent and written by Juliette Towhidi.

The film starts with the image of a cheering crowd, celebrating the end of the war in 1918. Vera Brittain goes through the crowd, the only one not cheering, and ends up in a church, where several women are praying.

In 1914 Vera fights to become a student at Somerville College, Oxford. While her father is against it, her brother Edward supports her, along with his close friend Roland Leighton, and their friend Victor. Together the "three musketeers" and Vera have a good summer, swimming in a lake together and having long walks in the nature. Roland, who is himself an aspiring poet, supports Vera in writing her own poems and pursuing her dream of becoming a writer someday. Roland and Vera start a shy romance. With the support of her brother Vera convinces her father to let her visit Oxford. The First World War breaks out and all three musketeers enlist. Vera convinces her father to let Edward join the army. When she arrives in Oxford she sees, for the first time, two amputees. In a newspaper Vera sees that four of the five pages of the paper are only the names of the fallen. Vera volunteers to join the Voluntary Aid Detachment as a nurse tending the wounded in a hospital. The other nurses know that she is from Oxford and therefore try to "break" Vera. For the first time Vera is confronted with the wounded from the front, when she has to wash a stinking soldier, who laid in his mud and blood from the battlefield in Flanders to the hospital in London. Roland comes back on home leave and is traumatised by his experiences at the front. After a talk with Vera he proposes to her and they decide to get married on his next home leave. They have a good day together after which Roland has to get back to France, this time accompanied by Vera's brother Edward. Vera's father has a breakdown after his son leaves. In the hospital an evergrowing stream of wounded soldiers arrive. Roland writes that he has been granted a leave on Christmas, and has been sent far behind the lines and is safe. He gets killed shortly before that. Vera finds out that he did not die "bravely and painlessly", as the letter she receives from the Army states. Due to a lack of morphine he suffered a long time in a hospital in France, shot in the abdomen. Her friend Victor is blinded by a gas attack and gets to the hospital. Vera proposes to him, so they "can take care of each other", but he refuses, although he has been in love with Vera for a long time. The next night he dies. Vera decides to go work in France herself. Her father is very proud of her. It's August 1917 and in France the situation of the wounded is very bad. Due to a lack of surgeons often the nurses have to perform amputations. Vera works in a hospital behind the frontlines, where she is first tasked with treating wounded Germans. Although she and her superior at first seem to not care much about the wounded enemy, they later both comfort a dying German soldier. After a big offensive the hospital is so crowded that the wounded have to lay in the mud outside. In a huge pile of corpses Vera discovers her brother, who is still alive. His infected wound gets treatment and he is saved. After that he is sent to Italy, which seems to be good news, because the fighting there is lighter. Edward wants Vera to proceed her academic career after the war, by visiting Oxford. Vera's mother has a nervous breakdown and Vera goes home. There she takes over the households, by cleaning the house and hiring a maid. Edward gets killed at the front in Italy. The day of the truce comes. Like in the first minutes of the movie, Vera is shown as she marches stoically through a cheering crowd, to end up in a church where some women are praying. Honouring her brother's wish Vera finally goes to Oxford, where she has nightmares about Roland's and Edward's death. Winifred Holtby, another student at the college, helps her cope with her trauma and to get back into the world. At a political discussion, about whether to punish or to forgive the Germans, most of the audience is for a "revenge treaty". George Catlin, who calls for a "forgiving piece" is booed upon. Vera gets on the stage and holds a speech about how she held the hand of a dying German soldier and that he was not different from her brother or her fiancé. Therefore she calls for a "No more" to war and revenge.


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