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French film brings dead president to big screen

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  • French film brings dead president to big screen

    French film brings dead president to big screen
    By Charles Masters

    Hollywood Reporter
    02/16/05 00:03 ET

    BERLIN (Hollywood Reporter) - French movies rarely have taken the
    country's politicians as subject matter, but "Le Promeneur du Champ
    de Mars" -- screening in competition at the Berlin Film Festival --
    breaks with that tradition, giving an often-intriguing glimpse of
    the final months of President Francois Mitterrand.

    Mitterrand heralded France's first Socialist administration in 1981
    and ruled uninterrupted until 1995. He died the following year of
    prostate cancer, aged 79.

    Based on a book by journalist Georges-Marc Benamou, "Le Promeneur" is
    told through the interaction between the president and an idealistic
    young reporter (played by Jalil Lespert) trying to fill the gaps in
    the life of this most enigmatic of political figures.

    Michel Bouquet delivers a masterly performance as Mitterrand, injecting
    equal measures melancholic reflection and dry humor as he comes to
    terms with his impending death and makes a final bid to polish his
    political legacy. But despite the accuracy of this filmic portrait,
    the movie no doubt will have limited appeal beyond those with a keen
    interest in French political history.

    The film's director, Robert Guediguian, said the idea was to use
    the master-pupil structure to illustrate a point about the failure
    of socialism in France to be transmitted from one generation to
    another. "The film is absolutely not about political power," he said.

    Guediguian is dismissive of the fact that his film fails to probe
    many of the darker areas of Mitterrand's life, the latter years of
    which were marked by accusations of corruption. "To exercise power
    is necessarily to compromise," Guediguian said, arguing that this
    happens regardless of political hue.

    The film does examine the degree of Mitterrand's support for the
    wartime Vichy regime, which collaborated with the Nazis. Guediguian
    said much of what was said about Mitterrand was manipulated by his
    right-wing opponents, and that allegations of anti-Semitism are
    "completely unfounded."

    Another episode in the movie shows that the president had the young
    journalist tailed, which echoes Mitterrand's fairly casual use of
    surveillance, including phone taps. "I don't excuse it. It's inherent
    in power. There is no state that doesn't have a secret service,"
    Guediguian said.

    Ultimately, what interests him is the disappearance of what he sees
    as true socialism in France. "If you want socialism, there has to
    be a rupture with capitalism," Guediguian said. "And I say that even
    here in Berlin."

    Next up for Guediguian is a movie that will reunite him with his
    family roots in Armenia because it follows two people from the
    Armenian diaspora returning from his hometown of Marseilles to the
    land of their origins. The film will star regular collaborators Ariane
    Ascaride and Gerard Meylan and is set to shoot in the summer.

    Reuters/Hollywood Reporter
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