Film Review
In September 2011, French cinema audiences experienced what must have
felt like a mass attack of
déjà
vu when two remakes of the Yves Robert classic
La Guerre des boutons (1962)
hit the big screen within a week of each other. The second film,
conveniently titled
La Nouvelle
guerre des boutons to avoid confusion at the box office, is
ostensibly the grander of the two films, and it was certainly better
publicised. Set in Nazi occupied France during the early 1940s,
it makes a laudable attempt to place the familiar story of childhood
rebellion within the context of a world at war and a country divided
geographically and morally by the Occupation. What made this
second film an easier sell was that it was directed by Christophe
Barratier, who had previously garnered international acclaim with his
2004 hit
Les Choristes. If you had
to choose between the two films, on paper Barratier's is probably the
one you would go for. If you have the stamina and the financial
wherewithal to watch both films, you are likely to conclude that the
first film, Yann Samuell's
La Guerre des boutons, is
better value for money.
It is worth saying that neither of the two films is strictly a remake
of Yves Robert's film. Unable to obtain the rights to Robert's
screenplay, both Samuell and Barratier had to develop their own
conception of Louis Pergaud's well-known 1912 novel (and they did so
completely unaware that another
Guerre
des boutons was in production). Samuell opted for a
film that is closer in spirit to Robert's, using it partly as an
autobiography, and partly as a commentary on changing moral attitudes
in the early 1960s. Barratier, by contrast, went back to the
1940s and opened up the scope of Pergaud's story to explore more adult
themes, in particular the corrosive nature of racism. Both films
are compromised by their naivety, but whereas Samuell's
version is charming in its simplicity, Barratier's
is laboured and creaks under the strain of its heavy burden
of forced allegory and unsubtle moralising.
It is a shame that Barratier's film had to come out so soon after
Samuell's, as comparisons between the two films are inevitably going to
be drawn, with the second film to make it onto the screen coming off
worse. Samuell's film definitely wins out on the character front
- the protagonists are more convincing and better developed, the child
actors who portray them more charismatic and likable. Barratier's
film partly makes up for this deficit with its more spectacular
visuals. Both films are probably far better suited for children
than adults and neither comes remotely close to matching the exquisite
charm of Yves Robert's film. You pays your money and you takes
your choice. If it's an engaging, character-centric drama you are
after, go for Yves Samuell's film. If, on the other hand,
you'd rather have blockbuster cinematic spectacle liberally doused in bogus
sentimentality, Christophe Barratier's
La Nouvelle guerre des boutons is
just the ticket. Personally, I'd rather stick with the 1962
classic, the only adaptation of Pergaud's novel that has any chance of
standing the test of time.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Christophe Barratier film:
L'Outsider (2016)
Film Synopsis
March, 1944. At the height of the Second World War, the peace of
a small region of rural France is disturbed by an altogether different
kind of conflict, one involving the children of two rival
villages. For longer than anyone can remember, the boys of
Longeverne and Velran have been at war, but recently their hostilities
have taken a more serious turn. Whenever one of the combatants is
taken prisoner by the other gang, the buttons are torn from his clothes and
he is sent back denuded and humiliated. In the midst of this
relentless onslaught, the leader of the Longeverne gang loses his heart
to a young girl named Violette, not knowing that she is of Jewish
origin...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.