Fukunaga’s Sin Nombre ran a similar risk, depicting a group of young Mexican and Honduran characters trying to make their way to America, but the preciseness of the storytelling and the intensity of the thriller elements kept it from feeling like a mere “message movie.” This one’s a little less successful, if only due to its similarity to other war movies. The West African setting is unique, but the insights are reminiscent of films like Apocalypse Now and The Thin Red Line, in which innocence is trampled amid the horrifying beauty of jungle warfare. (The movie was largely shot in Ghana, where the producers found Attah, and Fukunaga depicts his fictional nation as a rich Eden despoiled by armed conflict in which the good guys and bad guys can sometimes be indistinguishable.)

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The film is told from Agu’s perspective, and with his broken English and naive observations, his occasional voiceover narration is meant to underline just how young and inexperienced he and his fellow child soldiers are—how they’ve essentially been brainwashed to become tiny killers without conscience. This fact never stops being unsettling, although non-professional actor Attah never quite rises above being a pungent symbol. Much better is Elba, who brings such lived-in menace to his role that we don’t quite think of him as evil. That’s because Commandant doesn’t seem himself that way, either: From his perspective, he’s a noble warrior trying to rid his beloved land of the bastards that ruined it. Beasts of No Nation’s cruelest irony is that, if this story was shifted just slightly, Commandant and his kids would be the clear-cut heroes fighting for justice. What’s great is that Elba plays his character that way regardless, which makes the man’s growing monstrousness and ego all the more gripping.

At 38, Fukunaga has already established himself as an excellent filmmaker of atmosphere. Even in his 2011 remake of Jane Eyre with Michael Fassbender, mood dominated everything else, sucking us into a world so completely that we felt we could roam around and get lost in it. There are a few mild plot twists here, but they’re not what stays with you. Rather, you remember the sweaty, untamed ferocity—whether it’s in these West African jungles, the soldiers themselves, or the madly unpredictable war in which they’re engaged. (There are a couple unspeakably gorgeous battle scenes, Fukunaga juxtaposing the enrapturing landscapes with the horrors of war in Malick-ian fashion. One of the big stories around this movie is that Netflix will start streaming it on Friday, the same day it’s available in some theaters. But unless you’ve got a huge TV at home, you may want to make the trek to the multiplex if it’s showing there.)

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It’s a cliché to say that a movie’s setting becomes a character in the story, but Fukunaga seems to have conceived Beasts of No Nation with that strategy in mind, plunging us into an environment where we can’t savor the visuals too long because we know death is always potentially around the corner. On one level, it’s a bit of a letdown that he hasn’t conceived a story that’s as vivid as the imagery, but on another, that may be part of his point. War movies are a staple because war is always with us: This one would just like us to remember some of the faces fighting these battles, and how young they are.

Grade: B


Grierson & Leitch is a regular column about the movies. Follow us on Twitter, @griersonleitch.