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Army of Shadows

Army of Shadows (French: L'Armée des ombres; Italian: L'armata degli eroi) is a 1969 Franco-Italian World War II suspense-drama film written and directed by Jean-Pierre Melville, and starring Lino Ventura, Paul Meurisse, Jean-Pierre Cassel, and Simone Signoret. It is an adaptation of Joseph Kessel's 1943 book of the same name, which mixes Kessel's experiences as a member of the French Resistance with fictional versions of other Resistance members.

Army of Shadows
2006 theatrical re-release poster
Directed byJean-Pierre Melville
Written byJean-Pierre Melville
Based onArmy of Shadows
by Joseph Kessel
Produced byJacques Dorfmann
StarringLino Ventura
Paul Meurisse
Jean-Pierre Cassel
Simone Signoret
CinematographyPierre Lhomme
Edited byFrançoise Bonnot
Music byÉric Demarsan
Production
companies
Distributed byValoria Films (France)
Fida Cinematografica (Italy)
Release dates
12 September 1969 (France)
6 October 1970 (Italy)
Running time
145 minutes
CountriesFrance
Italy
LanguagesFrench
German
English

The film follows a small group of Resistance fighters as they move between safe houses, work with the Allied militaries, kill informers, and attempt to evade the capture and execution that they know is their most likely fate.[1] While portraying its characters as heroic, the film presents a bleak, unromantic view of the Resistance.[2][3]

At the time of its initial release in France, Army of Shadows was not well-received, as, in the wake of the events of May 1968, French critics denounced it for its perceived glorification of Charles de Gaulle. American art-film programmers of the time took their cues from Cahiers du cinéma, which attacked the film on this basis,[3] so it was not released in the United States until 2006,[1][3] after a reappraisal of the film and Melville's oeuvre published in Cahiers du cinéma in the mid-1990s led to its restoration and re-release.[3] The film was critically acclaimed in the U.S. and appeared on many critics' lists of the best films of 2006.[2][3]

Plot

Philippe Gerbier, the head of a French Resistance cell, is arrested by Vichy French police on suspicion of Resistance activity. Although he is acquitted due to a lack of evidence, he is still sent to an internment camp. He and a young Communist work on an escape plan, but before they can execute it, Gerbier is transported to Paris. While waiting to be questioned by the Gestapo, he manages to kill a guard and flee.

In Marseille, Gerbier, Félix Lepercq, Guillaume "Le Bison" Vermersch, and Claude "Le Masque" Ullmann trick Paul Dounat, the young agent who betrayed Gerbier, into meeting them. They take him to a house, but discover the neighboring house is newly occupied, so they cannot use their guns to kill Dounat. Lacking a decent knife, they strangle their former associate.

Félix meets his old friend Jean-François Jardie in a bar and recruits the risk-loving former pilot to join the Resistance. While on a mission to Paris, Jean-François visits his older brother Luc, a renowned philosopher who appears to live a detached, scholarly life. He then travels to the Mediterranean coast to help evacuate some Allied soldiers, along with Gerbier and the "Big Boss", to London via a submarine to Gibraltar. Jean-François does not recognize him in the dark, but the Big Boss turns out to be Luc, whose identity is a closely guarded secret.

In London, Gerbier tries to arrange additional support for the Resistance from the Free French leadership, and Luc is decorated by Charles de Gaulle. When Gerbier learns Félix has been arrested by the Gestapo, he cuts his trip short and parachutes into the French countryside.

After Félix's arrest, Mathilde, a Parisian housewife who is part of the Resistance, moved down to Lyon to run Gerbier's cell, and Gerbier is impressed by her abilities, so he keeps her around. She devises a plan to rescue Félix, who is being tortured at the Gestapo headquarters. Jean-François, after hearing the details, writes Gerbier a letter of resignation and incriminates himself with an anonymous letter to the Gestapo so he will be jailed with Félix. Mathilde, Le Masque, and Le Bison try to rescue Félix disguised as Germans and with a forged order to transfer him to Paris, but their plan fails when the prison doctor pronounces him unfit for transport, as he is barely alive. When Jean-François, who has also been badly beaten, sees the rescue has failed, he gives Félix his only cyanide pill.

Having seen Gerbier's picture on a wanted poster during the rescue attempt, Mathilde urges him to lie low, but he says there is no one who can take his place at the moment. He is swept up in a raid by Vichy police and handed over to the Germans. Taken to be executed, Gerbier and his cellmates are told that, if they can reach the far wall of a room before they are killed by machine gunners, they will be allowed to live a little longer. Once the shooting starts, smoke bombs block the Germans' view and a rope is dropped down to Gerbier. He climbs it and escapes.

Gerbier goes to hide out for a month in an abandoned farmhouse. One day, Luc arrives to discuss what to do about Mathilde, who has been arrested. He worries she will inform on her confederates, as her teenage daughter has been threatened. Luc hides when Le Masque and Le Bison arrive with the news that Mathilde is free and two members of the Resistance have been captured. Gerbier orders Mathilde's immediate execution, but Le Bison refuses to do so and swears to prevent Gerbier from killing her, so Luc emerges and convinces Le Bison that Mathilde would want them to kill her before she is forced to identify anyone else.

Luc accompanies Gerbier, Le Bison, and Le Masque to Paris. They locate Mathilde on the street, and Le Bison shoots her twice before they drive away. Closing text reveals that all four men were captured and died within less than a year.

Cast

  • Lino Ventura as Philippe Gerbier, a civil engineer who leads a French Resistance cell based in Lyon
  • Paul Meurisse as "Saint" Luc Jardie, who, unknown to his brother Jean-François, is a senior member of the Resistance. This character is partly based on the philosopher and Resistance leader Jean Cavaillès.
  • Jean-Pierre Cassel as Jean-François Jardie, Luc's younger brother, who joins Gerbier's Resistance cell through his friendship with Félix
  • Simone Signoret as Mathilde, who becomes Gerbier's assistant
  • Claude Mann as Claude "Le Masque" Ullmann, the youngest member of Gerbier's Resistance cell
  • Paul Crauchet as Félix Lepercq, a member of Gerbier's Resistance cell
  • Christian Barbier as Guillaume "Le Bison" Vermersch, a member of Gerbier's Resistance cell
  • Serge Reggiani as the barber who gives Gerbier a shave and a jacket
  • André "Colonel Passy" Dewavrin as himself, an official of the Free France intelligence services based in London
  • Alain Dekok as Legrain, the young Communist who works at the power plant of the internment camp to which Gerbier is sent
  • Alain Mottet as the commander of the internment camp to which Gerbier is sent
  • Alain Libolt as Paul Dounat, the young member of Gerbier's Resistance cell who is killed by for informing on his associates
  • Jean-Marie Robain as Baron de Ferté-Talloire, who lets Gerbier use his estate for Resistance activities
  • Albert Michel as the gendarme who escorts Gerbier to the internment camp
  • Denis Sadier as the doctor at the Gestapo headquarters in Lyon
  • Georges Sellier as Colonel Jarret du Plessis, who is held in the same building as Gerbier at the internment camp
  • Marco Perrin as Octave Bonnafous, a traveling salesman who is held in the same building as Gerbier at the internment camp
  • Hubert de Lapparent as Aubert, a pharmacist who is held in the same building as Gerbier at the internment camp
  • Colin Mann as the RAF soldier who rides in the plane with Gerbier
  • Anthony Stuart as the RAF Major who teaches Gerbier about his parachuting equipment
  • Michel Fretault as the "anonymous patriot" who escapes with Gerbier in Paris
  • Michel Dacquin as one of Gerbier's cellmates after he is apprehended in the restaurant
  • Jeanne Pérez as Marie, Luc's maid
  • Pierre Vaudier as the man at the antique shop
  • Jacques Marbeuf as the lead interrogator at the Gestapo headquarters in Lyon. This character is based on Klaus Barbie, the "Butcher of Lyon".
  • Marcel Bernier as the customs agent who comes across Jean-François on the beach at night (uncredited)

Nathalie Delon, who had made her big-screen debut in Melville's previous film, Le Samouraï (1967), has a cameo appearance in Army of Shadows as the woman with Jean-François at the bar in Marseille. The film's editor, Françoise Bonnot, plays the secretary at the talent agency in Lyon.

Critical reception

When it was originally released in France in 1969, the film had a poor critical reception due to the political context of the time, as the events of May 68 had hurt de Gaulle's reputation, and the glorification of the Resistance had become taboo during the Algerian War. As a result of the poor reviews, it was not initially distributed widely outside of France, but it was very well-received when it was finally released in the U.K. in the late 1970s. American audiences were unable to discover the film until 2006, when a restoration was released, and the film then appeared on many critics' top ten lists of the best films of 2006.[4]

On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a 97% approval rating based on 76 reviews, with an average score of 8.6 out of 10; the site's "critics consensus" reads: "Originally made in 1969, this recently reissued classic is a masterful examination of the inner workings of the World War II resistance efforts."[5] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 99 out of 100 based on 24 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim".[6]

Upon its 2006 release, Roger Ebert added Army of Shadows to his "Great Movies" list, writing: "This restored 35mm print, now in art theaters around the country, may be 37 years old, but it is the best foreign film of the year."[7]

Cinematographer Roger Deakins has called Army of Shadows one of his favorite films,[8] as has director Lawrence Kasdan.

Home media

In Europe, the British Film Institute released the film on Region 2 DVD in November 2006. It was released on Blu-ray as part of the StudioCanal Collection in 2013, with a bonus documentary and a booklet as special features.

In the United States, the film was released by the Criterion Collection on both Region 1 DVD and Blu-ray in May 2007. This release was out of print by 2010 and re-issued in April 2020.

References

  1. ^ a b Ebert, Roger (2006-05-21). "rogerebert.com: Great Movies: Army of Shadows". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 2008-05-05.
  2. ^ a b Tobias, Scott. "Army Of Shadows".
  3. ^ a b c d e "Army of Shadows: Out of the Shadows". The Criterion Collection.
  4. ^ "Metacritic: 2006 Film Critic Top Ten Lists". Metacritic. from the original on 2007-12-13. Retrieved 2008-01-08.
  5. ^ "Army of Shadows (L'armée des ombres) (1969)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 23 January 2023.
  6. ^ "Army of Shadows". Metacritic. Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  7. ^ Ebert, Roger. "Army of Shadows Movie Review & Film Summary (1969)". RogerEbert.com. Retrieved 19 May 2019.
  8. ^ Hanna, Beth (2013-09-23). "Cinematographer Roger Deakins' Handwritten List of Top 10 Films Includes Kubrick, Leone, Melville and More". IndieWire. Retrieved 2020-12-08.

External links

army, shadows, book, hillel, cohen, palestinian, collaboration, with, zionism, 1917, 1948, quebec, documentary, armée, ombre, manon, barbeau, french, armée, ombres, italian, armata, degli, eroi, 1969, franco, italian, world, suspense, drama, film, written, dir. For the book by Hillel Cohen see Army of Shadows Palestinian Collaboration with Zionism 1917 1948 For the Quebec documentary L Armee de l ombre see Manon Barbeau Army of Shadows French L Armee des ombres Italian L armata degli eroi is a 1969 Franco Italian World War II suspense drama film written and directed by Jean Pierre Melville and starring Lino Ventura Paul Meurisse Jean Pierre Cassel and Simone Signoret It is an adaptation of Joseph Kessel s 1943 book of the same name which mixes Kessel s experiences as a member of the French Resistance with fictional versions of other Resistance members Army of Shadows2006 theatrical re release posterDirected byJean Pierre MelvilleWritten byJean Pierre MelvilleBased onArmy of Shadowsby Joseph KesselProduced byJacques DorfmannStarringLino VenturaPaul MeurisseJean Pierre CasselSimone SignoretCinematographyPierre LhommeEdited byFrancoise BonnotMusic byEric DemarsanProductioncompaniesLes Films CoronaFono RomaDistributed byValoria Films France Fida Cinematografica Italy Release dates12 September 1969 France 6 October 1970 Italy Running time145 minutesCountriesFranceItalyLanguagesFrenchGermanEnglishThe film follows a small group of Resistance fighters as they move between safe houses work with the Allied militaries kill informers and attempt to evade the capture and execution that they know is their most likely fate 1 While portraying its characters as heroic the film presents a bleak unromantic view of the Resistance 2 3 At the time of its initial release in France Army of Shadows was not well received as in the wake of the events of May 1968 French critics denounced it for its perceived glorification of Charles de Gaulle American art film programmers of the time took their cues from Cahiers du cinema which attacked the film on this basis 3 so it was not released in the United States until 2006 1 3 after a reappraisal of the film and Melville s oeuvre published in Cahiers du cinema in the mid 1990s led to its restoration and re release 3 The film was critically acclaimed in the U S and appeared on many critics lists of the best films of 2006 2 3 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Critical reception 4 Home media 5 References 6 External linksPlot EditPhilippe Gerbier the head of a French Resistance cell is arrested by Vichy French police on suspicion of Resistance activity Although he is acquitted due to a lack of evidence he is still sent to an internment camp He and a young Communist work on an escape plan but before they can execute it Gerbier is transported to Paris While waiting to be questioned by the Gestapo he manages to kill a guard and flee In Marseille Gerbier Felix Lepercq Guillaume Le Bison Vermersch and Claude Le Masque Ullmann trick Paul Dounat the young agent who betrayed Gerbier into meeting them They take him to a house but discover the neighboring house is newly occupied so they cannot use their guns to kill Dounat Lacking a decent knife they strangle their former associate Felix meets his old friend Jean Francois Jardie in a bar and recruits the risk loving former pilot to join the Resistance While on a mission to Paris Jean Francois visits his older brother Luc a renowned philosopher who appears to live a detached scholarly life He then travels to the Mediterranean coast to help evacuate some Allied soldiers along with Gerbier and the Big Boss to London via a submarine to Gibraltar Jean Francois does not recognize him in the dark but the Big Boss turns out to be Luc whose identity is a closely guarded secret In London Gerbier tries to arrange additional support for the Resistance from the Free French leadership and Luc is decorated by Charles de Gaulle When Gerbier learns Felix has been arrested by the Gestapo he cuts his trip short and parachutes into the French countryside After Felix s arrest Mathilde a Parisian housewife who is part of the Resistance moved down to Lyon to run Gerbier s cell and Gerbier is impressed by her abilities so he keeps her around She devises a plan to rescue Felix who is being tortured at the Gestapo headquarters Jean Francois after hearing the details writes Gerbier a letter of resignation and incriminates himself with an anonymous letter to the Gestapo so he will be jailed with Felix Mathilde Le Masque and Le Bison try to rescue Felix disguised as Germans and with a forged order to transfer him to Paris but their plan fails when the prison doctor pronounces him unfit for transport as he is barely alive When Jean Francois who has also been badly beaten sees the rescue has failed he gives Felix his only cyanide pill Having seen Gerbier s picture on a wanted poster during the rescue attempt Mathilde urges him to lie low but he says there is no one who can take his place at the moment He is swept up in a raid by Vichy police and handed over to the Germans Taken to be executed Gerbier and his cellmates are told that if they can reach the far wall of a room before they are killed by machine gunners they will be allowed to live a little longer Once the shooting starts smoke bombs block the Germans view and a rope is dropped down to Gerbier He climbs it and escapes Gerbier goes to hide out for a month in an abandoned farmhouse One day Luc arrives to discuss what to do about Mathilde who has been arrested He worries she will inform on her confederates as her teenage daughter has been threatened Luc hides when Le Masque and Le Bison arrive with the news that Mathilde is free and two members of the Resistance have been captured Gerbier orders Mathilde s immediate execution but Le Bison refuses to do so and swears to prevent Gerbier from killing her so Luc emerges and convinces Le Bison that Mathilde would want them to kill her before she is forced to identify anyone else Luc accompanies Gerbier Le Bison and Le Masque to Paris They locate Mathilde on the street and Le Bison shoots her twice before they drive away Closing text reveals that all four men were captured and died within less than a year Cast EditLino Ventura as Philippe Gerbier a civil engineer who leads a French Resistance cell based in Lyon Paul Meurisse as Saint Luc Jardie who unknown to his brother Jean Francois is a senior member of the Resistance This character is partly based on the philosopher and Resistance leader Jean Cavailles Jean Pierre Cassel as Jean Francois Jardie Luc s younger brother who joins Gerbier s Resistance cell through his friendship with Felix Simone Signoret as Mathilde who becomes Gerbier s assistant Claude Mann as Claude Le Masque Ullmann the youngest member of Gerbier s Resistance cell Paul Crauchet as Felix Lepercq a member of Gerbier s Resistance cell Christian Barbier as Guillaume Le Bison Vermersch a member of Gerbier s Resistance cell Serge Reggiani as the barber who gives Gerbier a shave and a jacket Andre Colonel Passy Dewavrin as himself an official of the Free France intelligence services based in London Alain Dekok as Legrain the young Communist who works at the power plant of the internment camp to which Gerbier is sent Alain Mottet as the commander of the internment camp to which Gerbier is sent Alain Libolt as Paul Dounat the young member of Gerbier s Resistance cell who is killed by for informing on his associates Jean Marie Robain as Baron de Ferte Talloire who lets Gerbier use his estate for Resistance activities Albert Michel as the gendarme who escorts Gerbier to the internment camp Denis Sadier as the doctor at the Gestapo headquarters in Lyon Georges Sellier as Colonel Jarret du Plessis who is held in the same building as Gerbier at the internment camp Marco Perrin as Octave Bonnafous a traveling salesman who is held in the same building as Gerbier at the internment camp Hubert de Lapparent as Aubert a pharmacist who is held in the same building as Gerbier at the internment camp Colin Mann as the RAF soldier who rides in the plane with Gerbier Anthony Stuart as the RAF Major who teaches Gerbier about his parachuting equipment Michel Fretault as the anonymous patriot who escapes with Gerbier in Paris Michel Dacquin as one of Gerbier s cellmates after he is apprehended in the restaurant Jeanne Perez as Marie Luc s maid Pierre Vaudier as the man at the antique shop Jacques Marbeuf as the lead interrogator at the Gestapo headquarters in Lyon This character is based on Klaus Barbie the Butcher of Lyon Marcel Bernier as the customs agent who comes across Jean Francois on the beach at night uncredited Nathalie Delon who had made her big screen debut in Melville s previous film Le Samourai 1967 has a cameo appearance in Army of Shadows as the woman with Jean Francois at the bar in Marseille The film s editor Francoise Bonnot plays the secretary at the talent agency in Lyon Critical reception EditWhen it was originally released in France in 1969 the film had a poor critical reception due to the political context of the time as the events of May 68 had hurt de Gaulle s reputation and the glorification of the Resistance had become taboo during the Algerian War As a result of the poor reviews it was not initially distributed widely outside of France but it was very well received when it was finally released in the U K in the late 1970s American audiences were unable to discover the film until 2006 when a restoration was released and the film then appeared on many critics top ten lists of the best films of 2006 4 1st David Ansen Newsweek 1st Ella Taylor LA Weekly 1st Glenn Kenny Premiere 1st Manohla Dargis The New York Times 1st Scott Foundas LA Weekly 1st Stephanie Zacharek Salon 2nd Jonathan Rosenbaum Chicago Reader tied with Statues Also Die 2nd Michael Sragow The Baltimore Sun 2nd Nathan Lee The Village Voice 2nd Wesley Morris The Boston Globe 3rd Stephen Hunter The Washington Post 4th Shawn Levy The Oregonian 4th Sheri Linden The Hollywood Reporter 5th Marjorie Baumgarten The Austin Chronicle 7th Richard James Havis The Hollywood Reporter 7th Richard Schickel Time magazine 8th Michael Wilmington Chicago TribuneUnranked top ten Steven Rea The Philadelphia Inquirer V A Musetto New York Post On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes the film has a 97 approval rating based on 76 reviews with an average score of 8 6 out of 10 the site s critics consensus reads Originally made in 1969 this recently reissued classic is a masterful examination of the inner workings of the World War II resistance efforts 5 On Metacritic the film has a weighted average score of 99 out of 100 based on 24 reviews indicating universal acclaim 6 Upon its 2006 release Roger Ebert added Army of Shadows to his Great Movies list writing This restored 35mm print now in art theaters around the country may be 37 years old but it is the best foreign film of the year 7 Cinematographer Roger Deakins has called Army of Shadows one of his favorite films 8 as has director Lawrence Kasdan Home media EditIn Europe the British Film Institute released the film on Region 2 DVD in November 2006 It was released on Blu ray as part of the StudioCanal Collection in 2013 with a bonus documentary and a booklet as special features In the United States the film was released by the Criterion Collection on both Region 1 DVD and Blu ray in May 2007 This release was out of print by 2010 and re issued in April 2020 References Edit a b Ebert Roger 2006 05 21 rogerebert com Great Movies Army of Shadows Chicago Sun Times Retrieved 2008 05 05 a b Tobias Scott Army Of Shadows a b c d e Army of Shadows Out of the Shadows The Criterion Collection Metacritic 2006 Film Critic Top Ten Lists Metacritic Archived from the original on 2007 12 13 Retrieved 2008 01 08 Army of Shadows L armee des ombres 1969 Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved 23 January 2023 Army of Shadows Metacritic Retrieved 16 July 2011 Ebert Roger Army of Shadows Movie Review amp Film Summary 1969 RogerEbert com Retrieved 19 May 2019 Hanna Beth 2013 09 23 Cinematographer Roger Deakins Handwritten List of Top 10 Films Includes Kubrick Leone Melville and More IndieWire Retrieved 2020 12 08 External links EditOfficial website Army of Shadows at IMDb Army of Shadows at Rotten Tomatoes Army of Shadows at Metacritic Army of Shadows at AllMovie Army of Shadows Out of the Shadows an essay by Amy Taubin at the Criterion Collection Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Army of Shadows amp oldid 1140407820, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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