Title: La Grande Illusion
Year: 1937
Director: Jean Renoir
Country: France
Language: French
Grand Illusion is
one of French Cinema's finest films. It brought Jean Renoir massive
acclaim from the United States, even President Franklin D. Roosevelt
gazed at the picture in admiration. Made a few years before the start of
WWII, Illusion travels back to the previous World War, a war
that Renoir claims was “based on fair play, a war without atom bombs or
torture." Renoir succeeds in showing the humanity of both sides, during a
time when the axis seemed sub-human.
During the First World War, two French soldiers are captured and
imprisoned in a German POW camp. Several escape attempts follow until
they are sent to a seemingly impenetrable fortress which seems
impossible to escape from.
Grand Illusion transcends the tight confines of
the war genre. There are no trenches, rarely a gun is shot and there are
no battle sequences. The accident of war appears to bring out the best
of POW's and their captors, who in peacetime would be strangers to one
another. Men on both sides subscribed to the same code of behavior, no
deaths are unjustified slaughters. This old European order died in the
trenches, as the Nazis were not so civilized.
The "grand illusion" in Renoir's title does not refer to
the POW prison escape attempts, but rather the illusion that somehow the
upper class are above warfare. German Commandant Von Rauffenstein
(Erich Von Stroheim) is absolutely shocked that his prisoners attempt to
escape, especially when aristocratic De Boeldieu (Pierre Fresnay) gives
him his word that they will not. For an enemy Rauffenstein is a rather
commendable fellow. Deluded by romantic notions of chivalry and
friendship, the Commandant makes for a touching character.
Grand Illusion ran for 26 weeks in New York, but
was banned by Mussolini in Italy and Goebbels in Germany. Goebbels would
declare it "Cinematic
Public Enemy No. 1,” ordering
the original negative seized. The print would then move along borders,
out of reach of Nazi hands. However, it was eventually assumed that the
negative was destroyed by an ally air raid in 1942. In the 60's Renoir
worked to "restore" his film, but efforts would prove futile. The
original negative, meanwhile, was captured by Russians as they occupied
Berlin
and shipped to an archive in Moscow. The world would wait 30 years after
it's premiere for a proper print that looks and sounds crisp and clear.
In conclusion, while Rules of the Game is
considered another Renoir masterpiece, I feel that Grand Illusion has
aged better. It is incredibly suspenseful and truly mesmerizing. His
sympathy for every character stuck in this terrible war fills every
shot, not a frame is without passion for his fellow man. Praise it! 5/5
No comments:
Post a Comment