Film Review
Mon colonel is a film that
provides a sobering reflection on the war that France would still like
to forget, and with good reason. "France without Algeria is not
France" was a mantra that was oft repeated during Algeria's war of
independence (1954-1962) as the country supposedly wedded to the notion
of liberty, egality and fraternity fought tooth and nail to hold onto
its colonial past. It was a belief that galvanised the French
military into acts of barbarism that no supposedly civilisation on
Earth could ever countenance. This film reminds us - with
great force and sincerity - of France's most shameful period. In
a wider context (not unrelated to more recent events), the film also
shows how easy it is for an occupying military presence to cross the
line into unthinking savagery, through the misguided belief that the
ends will justify the means.
The screenplay, adapted from Francis Zamponi's novel, was co-scripted
by Costa-Gavras, the acclaimed director, known for political films such
as
Z
(1969) and
L'Aveu (1970). The
impressive cast is headed by Robinson Stévenin and Olivier
Gourmet (who had to shed thirty kilograms so that he could get into an
officer's uniform). Stévenin is particularly convincing as
the naive young army officer who ends up being torn between his duty to
France, a desire to impress his superiors and his conscience. His is a startling portrayal of
misguided loyalty and moral cowardice, against which Olivier Gourmet's
loathsome Colonel Duplan appears to be a man of integrity, but only
because he is so obviously lacking in humanity and conscience.
So powerful are some of the images in this film, and so
effective is it in evoking the past and its continuing impact on the
present, that the film's artistic deficiencies are readily
overlooked. For his first film, director Laurent Herbiet
uses an approach that is perhaps too conventional, too detached and
could perhaps have been much more daring in his
mise-en-scène. The sequences set in Algeria in the
1950s are far more effective than those set in the present day, and not
only because they are shot in crisp black-and-white (which somehow
makes the atrocities played out before our eyes even more
gruesome). By contrast, the scenes set in present day France lack any dramatic force, and even
the denouement seems feeble and a tad unconvincing (despite Charles
Aznavour's moving cameo appearance). What seems to be missing is
a sense of the extent to which the events of the Algerian conflict
still shock, still continue to evoke shame and incredulity in the
French people, when they are revived. Yet films such as this do a
a great service in reminding us of the political and military blunders
of the past, so that, perhaps, we may avoid them in the future.
© James Travers 2009
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Film Synopsis
In the mid-1990s, Raoul Duplan, a retired colonel, is found dead at his home
in Paris, shot through the head. Not long afterwards, some anonymous
letters and pages torn from a diary are sent to the investigators in the
police and army who are looking into the murder. It becomes immediately
apparent that the killing is in some way connected with Duplan's past military
exploits during the Algerian War of Independence. Almost forty years
earlier, in 1957, Duplan is based in Saint-Arnaud, Algeria, and discharges
his duties with ruthless efficiency. These include the routine use
of torture and summary execution, authorised by the French government as
part of a determined campaign to suppress the Algerian uprising. A
young and idealistic army recruit, Guy Rossi, is shocked by what he sees
when he arrives and finds himself under Duplan's command. For the glory
of France, Rossi soon realises he is expected to behave like a barbarian.
This is not something he can easily accept...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.