Film Review
It wasn't until Marcel Ophuls made his earth-shattering documentary
Le Chagrin et la pitié
(1971) that the French nation began to face up to the grim realities of the
Nazi Occupation. Since the end of the war, the view that prevailed
in France was the myth concocted by General de Gaulle, that throughout the
duration of the occupation the country had been a nation of heroic resistance
fighters valiantly working in unison to thwart the military ambitions of
the Third Reich. In literature, in films, and certainly in the national
press, virtually no one appeared willing to contradict this comforting fantasy,
and even one of the most highly regarded French films released after the
war, René Clément's
La Bataille du rail (1946),
makes no bones about fostering this delusion.
Ophuls's film dared to challenge the popular de Gaulle myth, with frank oral
testimony that unveiled a far less honourable account of France's wartime
experiences. It was a truth that the French nation was not yet ready
to digest. When it first saw the light of day, the film was viciously
reviled by the press and quickly banned by the French government. Yet
this was not the first time that a French filmmaker had dared to challenge
the orthodox view of the Occupation. In 1960, a rookie filmmaker,
Jean Dewever, made a bold attempt to offer a more honest account of this
far from glorious episode in French history, but needless to say, his efforts
to expose the truth were doomed to fail.
It's not hard to see why the ironically titled
Les Honneurs de la guerre
had such a frosty reception. Not only does it fail in its duty to glorify
the French Resistance, it also has the brazen temerity to humanise the enemy,
portraying the German military not as demonic instruments of the vilest regime
ever to infect the earth, but as weary victims of a needlessly protracted
conflict, as eager for an end to hostilities as the people they are supposedly
terrorising. The horrors of war, whilst never far from the events depicted
on the screen, are not dwelt on and for the most part all we see are French
villagers and German soldiers making the most of the lull in the fighting,
both sides eagerly relishing the peace that is just over the horizon.
In a way that soberly evokes the opening to Alain Resnais's
L'Année dernière
à Marienbad (1961), the film begins with a slow, long tracking
shot through an apparently deserted French town. The pristine narrow
streets are strewn with banners that celebrate France's Liberation by the
Allies in the summer of 1944, and yet there is a deathly silence, a chilling
absence of life of any kind. The only hint of the recent
atrocities to hit the town are fleeting glimpses of burning buildings and
the dangling lower portion of a hanged resistance fighter. The town
appears to be totally deserted, apart from a small contingent of German troops,
who appear wholly dispirited by a war that seems to have gone on forever.
Hungry, weary and humiliated, they are the easiest of targets for the French
snipers hiding out on the rooftops. Some of the soldiers are little
more than boys. The most poignant scene depicts a mortally wounded
German conscript bemoaning the fact that if he had opted for a military career
he would have been an officer and thereby avoided his fate, dying far from
home, from a gunshot wound at the age of 23.
The fatalistic mood of the dispirited Germans makes a stark contrast with
the party atmosphere that has overtaken a nearby French village, where an
exuberant wedding party is in full-swing. The only thing that connects
the two groups of people is a common desire to end the fighting and return
to normal life. Surely it would be the easiest thing in the world for
the two sides to come together and agree a truce? The cruel message
of Dewever's film is that a shared desire for peace is not enough to bring
about this outcome. The other thing that is required is mutual trust
- and the absence of this is all it takes to transform comedy into the grimmest
of tragedies.
Although Dewever spares us the gruesome spectacle of the final battle in
which, presumably, the crushed German battalion is brutally wiped out by
their more determined French opponents, we gain a visceral sense of what
is taking place, just through the sound of the exchange of gunfire that suddenly
erupts at the end of the film - a deafening hellish cacophony that seems
to last an eternity. Here the Resistance are portrayed not as brave
heroes, defenders of French nationhood, but as merciless butchers revelling
in an orgy of death. Little wonder the film was so ill-received by the French
censors.
Despite being banned by the government,
Les Honneurs de la guerre
was enthusiastically received by many distinguished French filmmakers of
the time, most notably François Truffaut. Another admirer of
the film was Jean Renoir, and it is not too difficult to see the influence
that this legendary cineaste had on Jean Dewever, through the sun-saturated
rural exteriors - so instantly evocative of
Partie de campagne (1936)
- and the daring way in which the German soldiers are portrayed as humanely
as the French protagonists (in sympathy with Renoir's
La Grande illusion).
The fact that Dewever allowed his German actors to put their dialogue in
their own words adds immensely to the humanity and realism of the scenes
with the German soldiers.
Even with the praise of such cinematic luminaries as Truffaut and Renoir,
the film failed to have much of an impact when it was first seen, and it
has languished in obscurity, all but forgotten, ever since. This early
setback cost its director dearly, effectively strangling a promising auteur
career at birth. Dewever continued making films on and off for another
twenty years, but he remained a comparative unknown, confined for most of
his career to working for French television.
Les Honneurs de la guerre is a modest low budget work that appears
breathtakingly understated compared with subsequent depictions of the Second
World War in French cinema - from Henri Verneuil's
Week-end à Zuydcoote
(1964) to Claude Berri's
Lucie Aubrac
(1997). And yet it is no less powerful in its antiwar sentiment.
There is probably no other French film that is so eloquent in its condemnation
of that most tragic of human failings - our pathological inability to resolve
our differences through dialogue rather than armed conflict.
The film's apocalyptic ending is both chilling and sickening - all the more
potent as it is left to the spectator to picture the full extent of the bloody
carnage to which only our ears have access. Can we as a species change
our ways and avoid the ultimate Armageddon to which we seem to be inexorably
heading? Can we have
any hope in the future of humanity whilst
we cling to the sick delusion that war is an honourable activity? These
are the questions that Jean Dewever leaves us contemplating as the ominous
word 'Fin' flashes into sight and the guns fall silent.
© James Travers 2022
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
One fine sunny morning in August 1944, the inhabitants of a small French
town, Nanteuil, are celebrating their liberation from Nazi occupation when
a small battalion of German soldiers suddenly shows up. The armed invaders
soon take control of the town, but a few of the townsfolk evade capture and
go into hiding, taking pot-shots at the soldiers from a safe vantage point
in a church tower. Realising that they have already lost the war, morale
amongst the German troops is at rock bottom. Tired and leaderless,
they agree that the only course open to them is to surrender to the locals.
To that end, they send one of the French hostages to a neighbouring village,
Muzière, to negotiate an immediate truce.
It so happens that the inhabitants of this latter village are in the midst
of a wedding party, making the most of a glorious day to celebrate the happy
union of two locals. Before the villagers can reach Nanteuil to make
arrangements for the peaceful arrest of the German soldiers, a Nazi officer
arrives in the town and orders his men to prepare to surrender to the advancing
American army. Unable to enter Nanteuil as agreed, the party of Muzière
villagers draw the obvious conclusion that they have been tricked by the
German soldiers. As hostilities resume, the sound of a ferocious battle
rages through the streets...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.