The film centres on the experiences of Robert LawrenceMC (played by Colin Firth), an officer of the Scots Guards during the Falklands War of 1982.[3] While fighting at the Battle of Mount Tumbledown, Lawrence is shot in the head by an Argentine sniper, and left paralysed on his left side.[4] He then must learn to adjust to his new disability.
The film sparked enormous controversy when first broadcast in 1988, in part because it conveyed the flat indifference shown by government, society and public to the returning wounded from the Falklands War; this content forms much of the story,[7] as Lawrence struggles to come to terms with his terrible injuries, and to face a life in which he cannot do the thing he is trained to do, the thing he loves: soldiering.
The film also triggered controversy by presenting an unvarnished portrait of the protagonist: for example, his joy in the brutalities of war and a flashback scene toward the end which shows him exulting at the top of Mount Tumbledown.[8] The film portrays Lawrence's love of the military life as much as it portrays his feelings of abandonment and bitterness as he tries to cope with his wounds, with little help from the government that sent him into battle.[9]
Lead actor Colin Firth is reported to have said that the political left and right hated the film because it did not conform to any fixed ideology.[10]
Media information
DVD release
Released on Region 2 DVD by BBC Video on 2007-03-26.[11]
The series was included in The Falklands 25th Commemorative Box Set with The Falklands Play.[12]
^Jackson, James (26 March 2016). "Tumbledown (BBC Store)". The Times. No. 71868. p. 23.
^Taylor, Val (1992). "10 - Playing Soldiers: the politics of casting in Tumbledown and Born on the Fourth of July". In Holderness, Graham (ed.). The Politics and Theatre of Drama. New York: St Martins Press. p. 184. ISBN978-0-333-51933-2.