WILLIAM
MARCH/
COMPANY K
William
March/Company K combines documentary and narrative film to tell the story
of author William March and his autobiographical novel Company K (1933),
considered by many to be the finest American novel about World War I and
often compared to All Quiet on the Western Front for its raw depiction
of the soldier’s experience.
As Paul Fussell points out in his groundbreaking book The Great War and
Modern Memory, the scope of the disaster in World War I sparked an unusual
number of combatants to speak the truth about their experience -- in the
words of literary scholar Benjamin Dunlap, to ‘express the inexpressible.’
March, born William Edward Campbell in Mobile Alabama in 1893, volunteered
for the Marine Corps after America’s entry into World War I in April
1917. He won three decorations for bravery at the battle of Blanc Mont,
but suffering from what we now call post-traumatic stress disorder, March
never talked about his war experience and little is known about the acts
for which he was decorated. According to critic Philip Beidler, the act
of writing Company K -- in effect reliving his very painful memories --
was itself an act of tremendous courage, equal to or greater than whatever
it was that earned him the Distinguished Service Cross, Navy Cross and
French Croix de Guerre.
Company K, his first novel, employs a multiplicity of viewpoints and sense
of irony that bears comparison to Faulkner’s achievement in The
Sound and the Fury and As I Lay Dying. The book was a critical success
on both sides of the Atlantic when it was published in 1933. “March
has succeeded” wrote Graham Greene. “His book has the force
of a mob protest; an outcry from anonymous throats. It is the only war
book I have read which has found a new form to fit the novelty of protest.”
March went on to write five other novels and many short stories set in
the pine barrens of Alabama where he grew up. His final novel The Bad
Seed (1954), about an eight year old murderess, was by far his biggest
commercial success -- though March himself is said to have called it ‘the
worst thing he’d ever written’.
Philip Beidler reminds us that in all his novels March displays a deep
compassion for people who suffer. March himself had frequent bouts with
depression and mental illness, most likely stemming from his war experience,
but kept writing until his death in 1954. Recalling Kipling’s famous
line from “Charge of the Light Brigade,” Beidler feels March
lived in a a world in which ‘someone had blundered. And it was left
for the sergeants, and the corporals and the privates to pick up the pieces.
It was a very courageous thing he did to keep looking the world in the
eye.’
The film includes scenes from the feature film version of Company K, in
which the author is portrayed as the character ‘Joe Delaney”;
excerpts from other works by March including the classic short story “The
Little Wife” and the novel Come in at the Door, and the trailer
for the classic black and white film The Bad Seed (1956) based on March’s
best-selling novel.
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to read a review of William March/Company K
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to read Philip Beidler’s Introduction to Company K
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here to read an article on William March/Company K
• Click here to learn more about
the feature film version of Company K
View trailer