Film Review
Claude Berri's sombre adaptation of Lucie Aubrac's wartime memoirs
Ils partiront dans l'ivresse offers
both a harrowingly realistic portrayal of life in the French Resistance
and a moving tale of the triumph of love over Nazi brutality.
There have been many films about the Resistance but few that present
such a recognisably feminine point of view. It is the central
character's humanity and dogged determination to save her husband's
life that sets the film apart from others of its ilk, bringing into
stark relief the single-minded savagery of the Resistance's Nazi
opponents. The film was noted at the time of its release for its
uncompromising depiction of physical violence - in particular the
barely watchable sequence in which the heroine's husband (superbly
played by Daniel Auteuil) is repeatedly beaten by Klaus Barbie, a
psychotic thug if ever there was one.
This was the third notable film set during the Second World War which
Claude Berri directed, after his remarkable debut feature
Le Vieil homme et l'enfant
(1967) and the acclaimed
Uranus (1990), which was
controversial for its unflattering depiction of the French under Nazi
Occupation. Whilst Lucie Aubrac is a far grander film than these
two comparatively modest productions (it had the budget of a comparable
Hollywood blockbuster, and shows), it doesn't quite match their charm
and immediacy. Secondary characters are thinly developed, often
little more than caricatures, and, in its striving for authenticity,
the film occasionally slips in the odd cliché. What
redeems the film are the stunning central performances from Carole
Bouquet and Daniel Auteuil, who give the film the compassionate edge it
badly needs to offset the cold detachment of Berri's
mise-en-scène and the brutality of the film's darker sequences.
Bouquet has come a long way since she first came to prominence as the
gutsy Bond girl in
For Your Eyes Only
(1981). In one of her career highpoints, she captivates with her
true-to-life portrayal of devotion and defiance. Her Lucie Aubrac
is a woman of rare courage and resilience, and, through Bouquet's
nuanced performance, it is easy to see where these qualities derive
from. In contrast to her Nazi enemies, whose toughness comes
solely from macho posturing and a lack of humanity, Aubrac's fearsome
resolve flows from her undying love for the man to whom she has pledged her
everlasting devotion. As ever, Auteuil ends up having to play the
hopeless victim, physically and emotionally broken by his experiences,
his courage smashed like an eggshell to expose the gooey mess
within. By contrast, Bouquet's Aubrac is as unflinching and
unassailable as an entire Panzer division; emboldened by love, driven
by the protective instincts of a wife and mother, she takes on
Barbie and his jackbooted cohorts as though they were just a gang of naughty
schoolboys and leaves us in no doubt that she belongs to the stronger
and nobler sex. Resistance is not just a matter of blowing up
trains; it is also about staying true to your beliefs and not allowing
the tyrant to break your will - something which this compelling film
drama demonstrates admirably.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Claude Berri film:
Une femme de ménage (2002)
Film Synopsis
Lyon, 1943. In Nazi occupied France, Raymond Aubrac is a leading
member of the French Resistance. Shortly after blowing up a
German supply train, he is arrested, ostensibly for
blackmarketeering. His wife Lucie, an independently minded
schoolteacher, takes it upon herself to get him released. Not
long after this, Raymond is arrested a second time, whilst attending a
meeting of Resistance leaders. After being brutally beaten and
questioned by the Gestapo chief Klaus Barbie, Raymond is thrown into
prison to await his impending execution. Lucie is prepared to do
anything to save her husband's life and so enlists the support of his
Resistance allies to rescue him. First, she must persuade the
implacable Barbie to allow her to marry the condemned man...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.