Blanche et Marie (1984) Directed by Jacques Renard
Drama / War
aka: Blanche and Marie
Film Review
The most noteworthy film from director Jacques Renard is this intimate
portrait of two women serving in the French Resistance at the time of
the Occupation during WWII.
Whilst it covers similar ground to that of Jean-Pierre Melville's
L'Armée des ombres (1969) and
Claude Berri's
Lucie Aubrac (1997),
Renard's film is far more modest and low-key, focusing on the day-to-day
experiences of two seemingly ordinary women who are committed
to doing their bit in the fight against Fascism. It is a gently
moving film which, whilst lacking the scale and dramatic power of similar
French Occupation Era films, provides an insight into the true nature
of heroism.
Miou-Miou and Sandrine Bonnaire are ideal choices to play the central
protagonists, characters whose outward ordinariness and apparent fragility belie their
incredible inner courage and tenacity. It is the compelling, perfectly judged
performances from these two great actresses that gives Renard's film
its emotional realism, making up for a somewhat lacklustre script which
is somewhat lacking in character depth and fails to make the
secondary characters more than thinly sketched archetypes.
Whilst the film has its flaws and feels more like a television
movie than a piece of cinema it does provide us with a taste of
what it was like for ordinary folk to live through one of the darkest
eras of French history.
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Film Synopsis
1941, a town in northern France during the Nazi Occupation. Blanche, a mother of
three children, wonders why her husband is behaving so secretively, and then discovers
that he is working for the French Resistance. Marie, the daughter of a local hairdresser,
also realises that her father is working for the same cause and volunteers to join.
Then Blanche's husband is killed...
Science-fiction came into its own in B-movies of the 1950s, but it remains a respected and popular genre, bursting into the mainstream in the late 1970s.
Continental Films, quality cinema under the Nazi Occupation
At the time of the Nazi Occupation of France during WWII, the German-run company Continental produced some of the finest films made in France in the 1940s.